tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-11933502516273183182019-01-12T04:27:48.105-05:00 A Man and A Mousetheses on unpopular culture from a man with a mouseA Man and A Mousehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/14293145068448926466noreply@blogger.comBlogger235125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-1193350251627318318.post-80889968756901038352017-12-08T21:57:00.002-05:002017-12-10T14:59:14.698-05:00How Joan Crawford Broke Into The MoviesJoan Crawford. The very whisper of her name sends shivers down the roots of rose bushes everywhere. <P></P> <center><a data-pin-do="embedPin" href="https://www.pinterest.com/pin/548876273306484819/"></a></center> <P></P> <blockquote><i><b>How I Broke Into The Movies</b> is a book published in 1930. It contains 60 articles on the title theme, written by movie stars of the day. Each star has a portrait on the left page and text they've (purportedly) written on the right page with the star's hand-written signature at the bottom for validity. The previous articles I've published are: <UL><LI><a href="http://amanandamouse.blogspot.com/2014/10/how-marion-davies-broke-into-movies.html" target="_blank">How Marion Davies Broke Into The Movies</a></LI><LI><a href="http://amanandamouse.blogspot.com/2014/12/how-colleen-moore-broke-into-movies.html" target="_blank">How Colleen Moore Broke Into The Movies</a> (also announced the WORLD INTERNET PREMIERE of the Moore's 1925 silent film <b>Ella Cinders</b> newly scored by me with jazz music of the 1920s)</LI><LI><a href="http://amanandamouse.blogspot.com/2014/12/how-colleen-moore-broke-into-movies.html" target="_blank">How Clara Bow Broke Into The Movies</a></LI></UL></i></blockquote> <P></P> I will continue publishing articles until the book is digitized. Here is the WORLD INTERNET PREMIERE of <i>How I Broke Into The Movies</i> written (in her own words) by Joan Crawford. <HR size="10" color="purple" width="60%"> <center><img src="https://www.amanandamouse.com/blogspot/BrokeIntoMovies/JoanCrawford/joanHowIBroke.png" width="350" /><br><i><b>How I Broke Into The Movies</b> Joan Crawford picture<br>Right click to view the full-size image.</i></center> <P></P> <center><img src="https://www.amanandamouse.com/blogspot/BrokeIntoMovies/JoanCrawford/joanHowIBrokeText.png" width="350" /><br><i><b>How I Broke Into The Movies</b> by Joan Crawford<br>Right click to view the full-size image.</i></center> <HR size="10" color="purple" width="60%"> <P></P> <center><b>Some interesting Joan links</b></center> <P></P> <dl> <dt><a href="https://archive.org/details/Half-Hours_With_Joan" target="_blank">Joan does radio</a></dt> <dd>Hollywood Star Playhouse: January 15, 1951 "Statement In Full"</dd> <dd>Screen Directors' Playhouse: May 26, 1950 "Flamingo Road"</dd> <dd>Screen Guild Theatre: October 15, 1939 "None Shall Part Us"</dd> <dd>Silver Theatre: May 7, 1939 "The Train Ride" </dd> <dd>Suspense: June 2, 1949 "The Ten Years" </dd> <dd>Suspense: March 22, 1951 "Three Lethal Words"</dd> <dd>Stars Over Hollywood: October 6, 1951 "I Knew This Woman"</dd> <dd>Stars Over Hollywood: March 1, 1952 "When The Police Arrive"</dd><p></p> <dt>Joan plays Password</dt> <dd><center><iframe width="400" height="225" src="https://www.youtube.com/embed/ZsYnCptaQm4?rel=0" frameborder="0" gesture="media" allow="encrypted-media" allowfullscreen></iframe><br><i>Late 1962, Post Baby Jane<br>Pre The Caretakers release</i></center></dd><p></p><dt>Joan in Rain, 1932</dt><dd><center><iframe src="https://archive.org/embed/LewisMilestonesRain1932" width="400" height="225" frameborder="0" webkitallowfullscreen="true" mozallowfullscreen="true" allowfullscreen></iframe><br><i>Joan Crawford is Sadie Thomson in Rain 1932</i></center></dd><p></p><dt>Joan speaks German</dt><dd><center><iframe width="400" height="225" src="https://www.youtube.com/embed/-MNoXrIh1eE?rel=0" frameborder="0" gesture="media" allow="encrypted-media" allowfullscreen></iframe><br><i>Joan Crawford's scene from <b>Wir schalten um auf Hollywood</b><br>an MGM promotional film in German from 1931</i></center></dd><p></p><dt>Joan on Pinterest</dt> <dd><center><a data-pin-do="embedBoard" data-pin-board-width="400" data-pin-scale-height="240" data-pin-scale-width="80" href="https://www.pinterest.com/amanandamouse/joan-crawford/"></a><!-- Please call pinit.js only once per page --><script type="text/javascript" async src="//assets.pinterest.com/js/pinit.js"></script></center></dd></dl> <P></P> <center><a data-pin-do="embedPin" href="https://www.pinterest.com/pin/548876273328343978/"></a></center> <P></P> <center><a data-pin-do="embedPin" href="https://www.pinterest.com/pin/548876273328344039/"></a></center> <hr>A Man and A Mousehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/14293145068448926466noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-1193350251627318318.post-91118095538632332212017-10-28T00:01:00.002-04:002017-10-29T17:50:47.950-04:00Christina Amphlett 1959-2013<a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chrissy_Amphlett" target="_blank">Chrissie Amphlett</a> was the lead singer and, with Mark McEntee, the driving force behind Divinyls, the Australian band behind many new wave classics including <i>Boys In Town</i>, <i>Pleasure and Pain</i>, and <i>I Touch Myself</i>. They stopped recording in 1997 and, I recently found out, Chrissie took on the iconic role of Judy Garland in the 1998 Australian production of The Boy From Oz. I found this tender and loving performance of Peter Allen's <i>All I Wanted Was The Dream</i> from the cast recording of <b>The Boy From Oz</b>. <P></P> <center><iframe width="400" height="225" src="https://www.youtube.com/embed/osG5bH4tU1M" frameborder="0" allowfullscreen></iframe></center><P></P> As the song played I was reading that Chrissie had passed away from breast cancer in 2013. I hadn't heard this. We were both born in 1959. <P></P> So I bookend the subtlety of this moving performance with the pure rock and roll of the first Divinyls I heard. Thanks for Siren Song and all the rest, Chrissie. Peace out. <P></P> <center><iframe width="400" height="225" src="https://www.youtube.com/embed/8Im9MBacUm4" frameborder="0" allowfullscreen></iframe></center> <P></P> <center><a data-pin-do="embedPin" href="https://www.pinterest.com/pin/548876273327812112/"></a></center> <P></P> <center><a data-pin-do="embedPin" href="https://www.pinterest.com/pin/548876273327812226/"></a></center> <hr> A Man and A Mousehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/14293145068448926466noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-1193350251627318318.post-51590425605663343272017-03-22T14:19:00.001-04:002017-03-22T14:21:19.646-04:00Rachael Lily Rosenbloom Lives!With all the <a href="http://amanandamouse.blogspot.com/2017/03/bette-midler-in-hello-dolly.html" target="_blank"><b>Hello, Dolly</b>-baloo</a> last week, another small yet pivotal performance (in the annals of musical theatre history) took place on Monday March 13, 2017: the first performance in 44 years of Paul Jabara's self-proclaimed disco musical <b>Rachael Lily Rosenbloom ... And Don't You Ever Forget It</b>. <P></P> <center><a data-pin-do="embedPin" href="https://www.pinterest.com/pin/548876273322175442/"></a></center> <P></P> Written almost entirely by Jabara (with book help from Tom Eyen), <b>Rachael...</b> never made it to Broadway despite seven previews at the Broadhurst Theatre. Since the musical <b>Carrie</b> has been revamped and is now produced often, <b>Rachael...</b> captures the crown as the most notorious flop in Broadway history. Unfortunately, even with the tweaks afforded the show for this concert staging, one can see why. The book is a pastiche of musical theatre references and campy laughs that don't really gel as a compelling story. And the characterization of Rachael makes no sense within the context of, for example, the title - Rachael changes her name to Raquel halfway through the show. In other words, we've forgotten it. <P></P> <center><a data-pin-do="embedPin" href="https://www.pinterest.com/pin/548876273322175416/"></a></center> <P></P> The songs are fun but then Paul Jabara writes fun songs. Remember <i>It's Raining Men</i>, <i>The Main Event</i>, <i>No More Tears (Enough Is Enough)</i> and his Oscar-winning <i>Last Dance</i>? The latter was appended to this concert as a finale but none of <b>Rachael...</b>'s score is as memorable as the aforementioned pop hits although <i>Dear Miss Streisand</i> and <i>Broadway Rhythm</i> immediately come to mind as standouts. (Jabara did record a revision of the musical's <i>Ocho Rios</i> on his 1986 album <b>De La Noche: The True Story (A Poperetta)</b>.) <P></P> <center><iframe width="400" height="225" src="https://www.youtube.com/embed/JEh5t8ZWUCc" frameborder="0" allowfullscreen></iframe></center> <P></P> Interestingly, on my very rare audience recording (puff, puff) of one of the 1973 previews (starring Ellen Greene and Anita Morris), the audience is quite receptive to the performance - as was the audience last week at Feinstein’s/54 Below. In my opinion, it had more to do with the performers and audience than the material being performed. Bonnie Milligan (as Rachael), Julia Mattison (as Stella Starfuckoff, the role originated by Morris) and Anastasia McClesky had the showiest roles but all the performers and the band made the hour and 15 minute concert quite enjoyable. My conclusion though is <b>Rachael...</b> will now be forgotten for another 44 years. <P></P> <center><a data-pin-do="embedPin" href="https://www.pinterest.com/pin/548876273322175406/"></a></center> <P></P> <center><a data-pin-do="embedPin" href="https://www.pinterest.com/pin/548876273322175434/"></a></center> <P></P> <center><a data-pin-do="embedPin" href="https://www.pinterest.com/pin/548876273322175401/"></a></center> <HR>A Man and A Mousehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/14293145068448926466noreply@blogger.com2tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-1193350251627318318.post-55997832391571783802017-03-19T11:13:00.002-04:002017-03-19T11:32:14.362-04:00Divine Hello, Dolly!<center><a data-pin-do="embedPin" href="https://www.pinterest.com/pin/548876273322069259/"></a></center> <P></P> In the new revival of Jerry Herman's <b>Hello, Dolly!</b>, Bette Midler doesn’t so much inhabit the character of Dolly Gallagher Levi as allow Dolly to inhabit her own divinity. With double takes and side eyes, Bette's Dolly breaks the fourth wall while mining all the laughs from Michael Stewart’s classic book. (Breaking the fourth wall is a typical conceit of original playwright Thornton Wilder.) Midler is ably aided by David Hyde Pierce, a perfect foil as Horace Vandergelder and someone who the producers felt worthy enough to add the previously cut Vandergelder solo, <i>Penny In My Pocket</i>, as the second act opener. The rest of the supporting cast sing and dance joyfully in the ageless musical: Gavin Creel as Cornelius Hackl is adorable, Kate Baldwin as Irene Molloy is resplendent, Taylor Trensch as Barnaby Tucker is a mensch and Beanie Feldstein as Minnie Fay is a revelation. The sets are darling, dances energetic throwbacks, costumes colorfully vintage and Herman’s songs tuneful as ever. <P></P> <center><a data-pin-do="embedPin" href="https://www.pinterest.com/pin/548876273322069302/"></a></center> <P></P>Undoubtedly though everyone in the house for this first (March 15) preview was there for Midler’s return to the musical theatre. Exhilaration was in the air as we braved the 20 degree weather for the 8:00 PM curtain. (No late seating EVER … for this engagement.) When Bette finally enters on a trolley, there’s a standing ovation. Bette lifts her skirts to dance at Irene Molloy’s, there’s a standing ovation. She sings the act one closer <i>Before The Parade Passes By</i>, there’s a standing ovation. And following the always entertaining <i>Waiters’ Gallop</i>, when the Harmonia Gardens curtains part and Bette descends the stairs to the strains of the classic title tune, the roar of approval is deafening. Bette’s Dolly is, at once, boisterous, reflective, quirky … and quite hungry. This role would be her star-making turn - if she hadn’t already been a star for almost fifty years! Bette Midler in <b>Hello, Dolly!</b> is an event that comes along once in a lifetime and lucky me I have tickets for two more events. How lucky can you get! <P></P> <center><a data-pin-do="embedPin" href="https://www.pinterest.com/pin/548876273322069176/"></a></center> <P></P> (How lucky can you get! See what I did there?) <P></P> <center><a data-pin-do="embedPin" href="https://www.pinterest.com/pin/548876273322069126/"></a></center> <P></P> <center><a data-pin-do="embedPin" href="https://www.pinterest.com/pin/548876273322069073/"></a></center> <P></P> Click the link for a NSFW throwback on Bette called <a href="http://AManAndAMouse.blogspot.com/2013/05/its-not-porn-its-bette-midler.html" target="_blank"><b>It's Not Porn. It's Bette Midler!</b></a>. <P></P> <center><a data-pin-do="embedPin" href="https://www.pinterest.com/pin/548876273321995853/"></a></center> <HR>A Man and A Mousehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/14293145068448926466noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-1193350251627318318.post-30780683778300179362017-02-18T11:47:00.002-05:002017-02-18T12:36:55.397-05:00Spring Awakening and Pandora's BoxI just uploaded to <a href="http://archive.org">archive.org</a> the complete English text, in PDF, of four plays by German playwright Frank Wedekind! <UL><LI>Spring Awakening</LI><LI>The Lulu Plays is comprised of: <UL><LI>Earth Spirit</LI><LI>Pandora's Box</LI><LI>Death and the Devil</LI></UL></LI></UL> <P></P> <center><iframe src="https://archive.org/stream/FrankWedekindPlays?ui=embed" width="400" height="358" frameborder="0" webkitallowfullscreen="true" mozallowfullscreen="true" allowfullscreen></iframe></center> <P></P> <b>Spring Awakening</b> is known today as the basis of the musical <b>Spring Awakening</b> with book and lyrics by Steven Sater and music by Duncan Sheik. The musical opened on Broadway in 2006 and played for a little over two years. This original production won several Tony awards including Best Musical, Best Book of a Musical and Best Original Score. It has been revived a number of times since then - most recently on Broadway in 2015. <P></P> <center><a data-pin-do="embedPin" href="https://www.pinterest.com/pin/548876273321485813/"></a></center> <P></P> <b>Earth Spirit</b> and <b>Pandora's Box</b>, the first two in <i>The Lulu Plays</i> trilogy, are the basis of the 1929 silent film <b>Pandora's Box</b> starring Louise Brooks and directed by G.W. Pabst. <P></P> <center><a data-pin-do="embedPin" href="https://www.pinterest.com/pin/548876273321485634/"></a></center> <P></P> <center><a data-pin-do="embedPin" href="https://www.pinterest.com/pin/548876273321485615/"></a></center> <P></P> Samuel A. Eliot, Jr. wrote the introduction to the collection in 1923, presumably the year it was published in the United Kingdom under the title <b>Tragedies Of Sex</b>. What a find! <P></P> <center><a data-pin-do="embedPin" href="https://www.pinterest.com/pin/548876273321485843/"></a></center> <HR>A Man and A Mousehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/14293145068448926466noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-1193350251627318318.post-53836735402737215842016-12-24T09:14:00.000-05:002016-12-24T09:14:31.796-05:00Happy Holidays from Edna St. Vincent Millay<center><img src="http://www.amanandamouse.com/blogspot/celebrate.jpg" width="405"></center><br><b>The Ballad of the Harp-Weaver</b> by Edna St. Vincent Millay, although set during Christmas time, is more about the love between and parent and a child than the holidays. I've been thinking a lot about love this week as my Pop-pop sits in a hospital waiting for the go-ahead to fix his fractured hip. He will miss the holiday celebration I flew down to enjoy with family and we will miss him being there terribly. <b>The Ballad of the Harp-Weaver</b> has been recorded by the likes of <a href="https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CXW7v0ab_18" target="_blank">Johnny Cash</a> and its author, the <a href="https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=e6Og6p_XC5w" target="_blank">aforementioned Millay</a>, but my favorite version has to be the recording by Mabel Mercer<br><br><center><iframe width="400" height="225" src="https://www.youtube.com/embed/gOu37VY59HE" frameborder="0" allowfullscreen></iframe></center><br>“Son,” said my mother,<br> When I was knee-high,<br> “You’ve need of clothes to cover you,<br> And not a rag have I.<br> <br>“There’s nothing in the house<br> To make a boy breeches,<br>Nor shears to cut a cloth with<br> Nor thread to take stitches.<br> <br>“There’s nothing in the house<br> But a loaf-end of rye,<br>And a harp with a woman’s head<br> Nobody will buy,” <br> And she began to cry.<br> <br>That was in the early fall.<br> When came the late fall, <br>“Son,” she said, “the sight of you <br> Makes your mother’s blood crawl,—<br> “Little skinny shoulder-blades<br> Sticking through your clothes!<br>And where you’ll get a jacket from<br> God above knows.<br> <br>“It’s lucky for me, lad,<br> Your daddy’s in the ground,<br>And can’t see the way I let<br> His son go around!”<br> And she made a queer sound.<br> <br>That was in the late fall.<br> When the winter came,<br>I’d not a pair of breeches<br> Nor a shirt to my name.<br> <br>I couldn’t go to school,<br> Or out of doors to play.<br>And all the other little boys<br> Passed our way.<br> <br>“Son,” said my mother,<br> “Come, climb into my lap,<br>And I’ll chafe your little bones<br> While you take a nap.”<br> <br>And, oh, but we were silly<br> For half an hour or more,<br>Me with my long legs<br> Dragging on the floor,<br> <br>A-rock-rock-rocking<br> To a mother-goose rhyme!<br>Oh, but we were happy<br> For half an hour’s time!<br> <br>But there was I, a great boy,<br> And what would folks say<br>To hear my mother singing me<br> To sleep all day,<br> In such a daft way?<br> <br>Men say the winter<br> Was bad that year;<br>Fuel was scarce,<br> And food was dear.<br> <br>A wind with a wolf’s head<br> Howled about our door,<br>And we burned up the chairs<br> And sat on the floor.<br> <br>All that was left us<br> Was a chair we couldn’t break,<br>And the harp with a woman’s head<br> Nobody would take,<br> For song or pity’s sake.<br> <br>The night before Christmas<br> I cried with the cold,<br>I cried myself to sleep<br> Like a two-year-old.<br> <br>And in the deep night<br> I felt my mother rise,<br>And stare down upon me<br> With love in her eyes.<br> <br>I saw my mother sitting<br> On the one good chair,<br>A light falling on her<br> From I couldn’t tell where,<br> <br>Looking nineteen,<br> And not a day older,<br>And the harp with a woman’s head<br> Leaned against her shoulder.<br> <br>Her thin fingers, moving<br> In the thin, tall strings,<br>Were weav-weav-weaving<br> Wonderful things.<br> <br>Many bright threads,<br> From where I couldn’t see,<br>Were running through the harp-strings<br> Rapidly,<br> <br>And gold threads whistling<br> Through my mother’s hand.<br>I saw the web grow,<br> And the pattern expand.<br> <br>She wove a child’s jacket,<br> And when it was done<br>She laid it on the floor<br> And wove another one.<br> <br>She wove a red cloak<br> So regal to see, <br>“She’s made it for a king’s son,”<br> I said, “and not for me.”<br> But I knew it was for me.<br> <br>She wove a pair of breeches<br> Quicker than that!<br>She wove a pair of boots<br> And a little cocked hat.<br> <br>She wove a pair of mittens,<br> She wove a little blouse,<br>She wove all night<br> In the still, cold house.<br> <br>She sang as she worked,<br> And the harp-strings spoke;<br>Her voice never faltered,<br> And the thread never broke.<br> And when I awoke,—<br> <br>There sat my mother<br> With the harp against her shoulder<br>Looking nineteen<br> And not a day older,<br> <br>A smile about her lips,<br> And a light about her head,<br>And her hands in the harp-strings<br> Frozen dead.<br> <br>And piled up beside her<br> And toppling to the skies,<br>Were the clothes of a king’s son,<br> Just my size.<br> <HR>A Man and A Mousehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/14293145068448926466noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-1193350251627318318.post-76783590957712750202016-10-30T22:55:00.001-04:002017-03-22T14:22:04.005-04:00Juzo Itami & Nobuko Miyamoto 1987 & 2016Juzo Itami is a Japanese actor and film director. His most internationally famous film is his second, the 1985 <i>noodle Western</i> <b><i>Tampopo</i></b>. In October, 2016 Nobuko Miyamototo, the late director's wife and actress in most of his films, travelled to New York City for the premiere of the restoration of <b><i>Tampopo</i></b> (<i>Dandelion</i>) at the Film Forum. Following are pictures from that question and answer session which was filmed for inclusion on the upcoming Criterion release of the film. Until then, it can be heard <a href="http://filmforum.org/do-not-enter-or-modify-or-erase/client-uploads/audio/TampopoOct212016_1.mp3" target="_blank"><b>here</b></a>. <P></P> <center><a data-pin-do="embedPin" href="https://www.pinterest.com/pin/548876273319874047/"></a></center> <br> <center><a data-pin-do="embedPin" href="https://www.pinterest.com/pin/548876273319874009/"></a></center> <br> <center><a data-pin-do="embedPin" href="https://www.pinterest.com/pin/548876273319877573/"></a></center> <P></P> Participants in the Q&A included Ms. Miyamoto, moderator Bilge Ebire and Chairman of the <a href="http://itami-kinenkan.jp/about/about03.html" target="_blank"><i>Itami Juzo Museum (web site in Japanese)</i></a>, Yasushi Tamaki, a translator and me - the only audience member to ask a question at 27 minutes and 3 seconds. <P></P> <center><a data-pin-do="embedPin" href="https://www.pinterest.com/pin/548876273319870229/"></a></center> <br> <center><a data-pin-do="embedPin" href="https://www.pinterest.com/pin/548876273319874061/"></a></center> <br> <center><a data-pin-do="embedPin" href="https://www.pinterest.com/pin/548876273319877587/"></a></center> <p></p> In 1987, Itami's third film <i><b>Marusa no Onna</b></i> (<i>A Taxing Woman</i>) would have an American run. In anticipation of its theatrical run, the film was premiered on the campus of the University of California at Los Angeles (UCLA). Itami and Miyamoto came to the United States for a question and answer session following the screening. I took these pictures at the question and answer. <p></p> <center><a data-pin-do="embedPin" href="https://www.pinterest.com/pin/548876273319870153/"></a></center> <br> <center><a data-pin-do="embedPin" href="https://www.pinterest.com/pin/548876273319870139/"></a></center> <br> <center><a data-pin-do="embedPin" href="https://www.pinterest.com/pin/548876273319870063/"></a></center> <br> <center><a data-pin-do="embedPin" href="https://www.pinterest.com/pin/548876273319870146/"></a></center> <br> <center><a data-pin-do="embedPin" href="https://www.pinterest.com/pin/548876273319870050/"></a></center> <br> <center><a data-pin-do="embedPin" href="https://www.pinterest.com/pin/548876273319870266/"></a></center> <br> <center><a data-pin-do="embedPin" href="https://www.pinterest.com/pin/548876273314246770/"></a></center> <br> On December 20, 1997, Itami killed himself by leaping from the building in Azabu, Tokyo in which the offices of Itami Productions were located. News of an extra-marital affair in which he was allegedly involved was to be published that week. He left a suicide note which read "Death will prove my innocence." In my opinion, it has; why would anyone cheat on the magnificent Nobuko Miyamoto? <HR>A Man and A Mousehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/14293145068448926466noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-1193350251627318318.post-77911320254343668402016-07-10T15:19:00.000-04:002016-07-11T10:41:46.045-04:00The Ramones at the Queens MuseumHere are some pictures of pieces on exhibit (until July 31, 2016) at the Queens Museum. The exhibit is named Hey! Ho! Let's Go! Ramones and the Birth of Punk and it's a wow! <P></P> <center><a data-pin-do="embedPin" href="https://www.pinterest.com/pin/548876273318268332/"></a></center> <P></P> <center><a data-pin-do="embedPin" href="https://www.pinterest.com/pin/548876273318268430/"></a></center> <P></P> <center><a data-pin-do="embedPin" href="https://www.pinterest.com/pin/548876273318268234/"></a></center> <P></P> <center><a data-pin-do="embedPin" href="https://www.pinterest.com/pin/548876273318268313/"></a></center> <P></P> <center><b>Check out some 70s and 80s themed music tees at <a href="http://skreened.com/crewdtees/category/music" target="_blank">crewdtees.com</a></b></center>. <P></P> <center><a data-pin-do="embedPin" href="https://www.pinterest.com/pin/548876273313849515/"></a></center> <HR>A Man and A Mousehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/14293145068448926466noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-1193350251627318318.post-40775100643889461982016-04-10T23:39:00.001-04:002017-01-12T23:00:27.063-05:00Sophie Tucker & Josephine Baker<P></P> <center><a data-pin-do="embedPin" href="https://www.pinterest.com/pin/548876273317020618/"></a></center> <P></P> Sophie Tucker was an American vaudeville singer whose meteoric career lasted the 80 years of her life. In 1910, after years of amateur performances Tucker was given the opportunity to perform on a legitimate vaudeville stage. The theater owner though said she could only perform in blackface. Much to her chagrin but needing to make a living, she did it. Over the ten years she performed in blackface her color went from 'burnt cork' to 'high yellow'. Once 'high yellow' she then ended her performances by removing her wig to reveal blonde hair, and her gloves to reveal white skin. One day in Chicago, she 'forgot' her makeup and went on as herself. She never used the makeup again. <P></P> <center><a data-pin-do="embedPin" href="https://www.pinterest.com/pin/548876273317020573/"></a><br><a href="http://amanandamouse.blogspot.com/2013/07/sophie-tuckers-autograph.html" target="_blank">Click here</a> for information about Sophie's autobiography.</center> <P></P> Josephine Baker was an American vaudeville performer who also performed in the legitimate theater in New York City. Her most famous theatrical performance was in the chorus of 1922's Shuffle Along (currently being revived on Broadway) but it was her blackface performances that were noticed and landed her the opportunity to open in La Revue Negre in Paris, France where Baker's erotic performances and infamous banana skirt earned her notoriety and money. Ultimately she gave up her American citizenship and became a French citizen. <P></P> <center><a data-pin-do="embedPin" href="https://www.pinterest.com/pin/548876273317020441/"></a></center> <P></P> In 1951, Baker was invited back to the US for an engagement in Copa City, a nightclub in Miami, Florida. She agreed to the run only if the audience would be segregated. Baker received death threats and bricks were thrown at the club. Tucker, who was booked to play Copa City following Baker, heard this and called a press conference in which she announced she would introduce Josephine Baker so if anyone wanted to do bodily harm to Ms. Baker they'd have to go through Sophie first. Opening night went off without a scuffle, the show received rave reviews, was standing room only and Baker was named the NAACP's Woman Of The Year. <P></P> <center><a data-pin-do="embedPin" href="https://www.pinterest.com/pin/548876273317020514/"></a></center> <P></P> The two icons became friends for life. <P></P> <center><a data-pin-do="embedPin" href="https://www.pinterest.com/pin/548876273317020482/"></a></center> <P></P> <center><a data-pin-do="embedPin" href="https://www.pinterest.com/pin/548876273317020494/"></a></center> <P></P> <center><blockquote><b>For more pictures, see Sophie Tucker & Josephine Baker on Pinterest.</b></blockquote></center> <P></P> <center><a data-pin-do="embedBoard" href="https://www.pinterest.com/amanandamouse/sophie-tucker-josephine-baker/"data-pin-scale-width="80" data-pin-scale-height="200" data-pin-board-width="400"> Follow Michael,'s board Sophie Tucker & Josephine Baker on Pinterest.</a><!-- Please call pinit.js only once per page --><script type="text/javascript" async src="//assets.pinterest.com/js/pinit.js"></script></center> <HR>A Man and A Mousehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/14293145068448926466noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-1193350251627318318.post-61840167400940933812016-01-21T21:38:00.005-05:002016-01-23T10:26:34.820-05:00Elizabeth Taylor in The Little Foxes<center><a data-pin-do="embedPin" href="https://www.pinterest.com/pin/548876273315950934/"></a></center> <P></P> On May 7, 1981, Elizabeth Taylor made her Broadway debut when she opened in Lillian Hellman's classic play <b>The Little Foxes</b> at the Martin Beck Theatre. The role of Regina Giddons, originally played on Broadway by Tallullah Bankhead and in the 1941 film by Bette Davis, was (again) perfectly cast and Taylor received nominations for both the Tony Award for Best Performance by a Leading Actress in a Play and the Drama Desk Award for Outstanding Actress in a Play. <P></P> <center><a data-pin-do="embedPin" href="https://www.pinterest.com/pin/548876273315951025/"></a></center> <P></P> Nearly $1 million worth of ticket sales were realized during the week after advertisements announced Taylor's theatrical run. The cast also included Tom Aldredge as her husband Horace, Dennis Christopher as Leo, Maureen Stapleton as Birdie, and Anthony Zerbe as Benjamin. Tony nominations also went to Austin Pendleton for Best Direction of a Play, Aldredge for Best Featured Actor in a Play, Stapleton for Best Featured Actress in a Play, and the play itself for Best Reproduction. I fortunately was enthralled by this production and this WORLD INTERNET PREMIERE is a scan of the program that was sold during the theatrical engagement. I don't remember what the program cost but I still have it so I think the money was well spent. <P></P> <center><iframe src="https://archive.org/stream/TaylorTLF?ui=embed#mode/2up" width="480" height="430" frameborder="0" webkitallowfullscreen="true" mozallowfullscreen="true" allowfullscreen></iframe></center> <P></P> <center><a data-pin-do="embedPin" href="https://www.pinterest.com/pin/548876273315950954/"></a></center> <P></P> Here are some interesting links with more information on <b>The Little Foxes</b> and <b>Regina</b>, the opera created from the play by Marc Blitzstein. <UL><LI><a href="http://www.theartsjournal.org/index.php/site/article/viewFile/643/343" target="_blank"><i>Tallulah Bankhead, Bette Davis, and Marc Blitzstein: Lillian Hellman’s The Little Foxes as Play, Film, and Opera</i></a> by Bernard F. Dick</LI><LI><a href="http://www.marcblitzstein.com/pages/biblio/articles/regina.htm" target="_blank"><i>The Roots Of Regina</i></a> by Eric A. Gordon</LI><LI><a href="https://www.musicalamerica.com/news/newsstory.cfm?storyid=35298&categoryid=5&archived=0" target="_blank"><i>Bronx Opera To Revive Blitzstein's 'Regina'</i></a> December, 2015 press release</LI></UL> <P></P> <center><a data-pin-do="embedPin" href="https://www.pinterest.com/pin/548876273315950979/"></a></center> <P></P> <center><a data-pin-do="embedPin" href="https://www.pinterest.com/pin/548876273315969134/"></a></center> <hr>A Man and A Mousehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/14293145068448926466noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-1193350251627318318.post-49231861127262396552015-12-31T22:03:00.001-05:002016-01-03T17:27:40.759-05:00How Gloria Swanson Broke Into The MoviesThe first time I took notice of Gloria Swanson she was playing a version of herself in <b>Airport '75</b>. I recognized her as the actress that Carol Burnett lampooned on her eponymous television variety show. A few years later when I became vegan I read how Ms. Swanson had been a vegetarian since 1928 and helped to promote her husband's book <b>Sugar Blues</b> (William Dufty). But it wasn't until I moved to Los Angeles that I became familiar with her career as an actress - first in silent films and then in her iconic role as Norma Desmond in Billy Wilder's <b>Sunset Boulevard</b>. <P></P> <center><a data-pin-do="embedPin" href="https://www.pinterest.com/pin/548876273313283860/"></a></center> <P></P> <center><iframe src="https://archive.org/embed/MALEANDFEMALE1919GloriaSwansonThomasMeighanLilaLeeDir.ByCecilB.DeMille" width="400" height="300" frameborder="0" webkitallowfullscreen="true" mozallowfullscreen="true" allowfullscreen></iframe></center> <P></P> Swanson began her career in early Charlie Chaplin and Mack Sennett comedies. By 1919 she was working for Paramount Pictures and with director Cecil B. DeMille. Stardom followed with films such as romantic lead in such films as <b>Don't Change Your Husband</b> (1919), <b>Male and Female</b> (1919) (based on a play by J.M. Barrie), <b>Why Change Your Wife?</b> (1920), <b>Something to Think About</b> (1920), <b>The Affairs of Anatol</b> (1921) and <b>Beyond The Rocks</b> (with Rudolph Valentino). By 1926, she was making independent films as a part owner of United Artists including <b>Sadie Thompson</b> (a huge hit famously remade as <b>Rain</b> starring Joan Crawford) and <b>Queen Kelly</b> (the infamous unfinished film directed by her <b>Sunset Boulevard</b> co-star Eric Von Stroheim). <P></P> <center><b>How Gloria Swanson Broke Into The Movies continues after the<br>WORLD INTERNET PREMIERE of How I Broke Into The Movies by Gloria Swanson.</b></center> <HR size="10" color="purple" width="60%"> <center><img src="http://www.amanandamouse.com/blogspot/BrokeIntoMovies/GloriaSwanson/gloriaPic.jpg" width="350" /><br><i><b>How I Broke Into The Movies</b> Gloria Swanson picture<br>Right click to open the image in a new tab.</i></center> <P></P> <center><img src="http://www.amanandamouse.com/blogspot/BrokeIntoMovies/GloriaSwanson/gloriaText.jpg" width="350" /><br><i><b>How I Broke Into The Movies</b> by Gloria Swanson<br>Right click to open the image in a new tab.</i></center> <HR size="10" color="purple" width="60%"> <P></P> Aside from the WORLD INTERNET PREMIERE of Gloria Swanson's essay, I've also uploaded <a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Killer_Bees_(1974_film)" target="_blank"><b>Killer Bees</b></a>, a 1974 ABC Movie Of The Week considered her last true acting role. (Despite being touted as her television debut, Ms. Swanson had been working in the medium since 1948 when she hosted <b>The Gloria Swanson Hour</b>.) She stars in <b>Killer Bees</b> (produced by Aaron Spelling) with a pre-<b>Charlie's Angels</b> Kate Jackson and Edward Albert. <P></P> <center><iframe width="400" height="300" src="https://www.youtube.com/embed/7APh7ns4S_E" frameborder="0" allowfullscreen></iframe><br><i><b>Killer Bees</b> is considered in the public domain.</i></center> <P></P> <center><a data-pin-do="embedPin" href="https://www.pinterest.com/pin/548876273305927405/"></a></center> <P></P> <center><iframe width="400" height="225" src="https://www.youtube.com/embed/hhx9woRaRgE?rel=0" frameborder="0" allowfullscreen></iframe><br><i>In 1957, Swanson performed <b>Those Wonderful People In The Dark</b> written<br>for a musical version of <b>Sunset Boulevard</b> she was shopping around.<br>Swanson held numerous backer auditions and performed the numbers<br>at cocktail parties, but the show didn't progress any further than that.</i></center> <P></P> <center><iframe src="https://archive.org/embed/GloriaSwanson1916" width="400" height="300" frameborder="0" webkitallowfullscreen="true" mozallowfullscreen="true" allowfullscreen></iframe><br><i>A cross-dressing Gloria Swanson in<br>Mack Sennett's The Danger Girl 1916</i></center> <P></P> <center><a data-pin-do="embedPin" href="https://www.pinterest.com/pin/548876273313442063/"></a></center> <P></P> <center><iframe src='https://archive.org/stream/bluebookofscreen00unse?ui=embed#page/236/mode/2up' width='400px' height='358px' frameborder='0' ></iframe></center> <P></P> <center><a data-pin-do="embedPin" href="https://www.pinterest.com/pin/548876273315713678/"></a></center> <P></P> <center><iframe src="https://archive.org/embed/GloriaSwansonCollection1929-1933&playlist=1" width="500" height="300" frameborder="0" webkitallowfullscreen="true" mozallowfullscreen="true" allowfullscreen></iframe><br><i>These musical tracks are recordings Swanson made for her films<br><b>The Trespasser</b> (1929), <b>Indiscreet</b> (1931) and <b>Perfect Understanding</b> (1933)</i></center> <P></P> <center><a data-pin-do="embedPin" href="https://www.pinterest.com/pin/548876273313442093/"></a></center> <P></P> <blockquote><i><b>How I Broke Into The Movies</b> was published in 1930 and contains articles on the title theme written by movie stars of the day like John Gilbert, Al Jolson, Greta Nissen, Will Rogers, and 55 other notable actors. The previously published articles are: <UL><LI><a href="http://amanandamouse.blogspot.com/2014/10/how-marion-davies-broke-into-movies.html" target="_blank">How Marion Davies Broke Into The Movies</a></LI><LI><a href="http://amanandamouse.blogspot.com/2014/12/how-colleen-moore-broke-into-movies.html" target="_blank">How Colleen Moore Broke Into The Movies</a> (also announced the WORLD INTERNET PREMIERE of the Moore's 1925 silent film <b>Ella Cinders</b> newly scored with jazz music of the 1920s)</LI><LI><a href="http://amanandamouse.blogspot.com/2014/12/how-colleen-moore-broke-into-movies.html" target="_blank">How Clara Bow Broke Into The Movies</a></LI></UL></i></blockquote> <P></P> <center><iframe src="https://archive.org/embed/6149_Dear_Miss_Gloria_01_21_02_07" width="400" height="300" frameborder="0" webkitallowfullscreen="true" mozallowfullscreen="true" allowfullscreen></iframe><br><i>A short film in which Swanson dispenses advice to the lovelorn.<br>Credits imply it was the first of a series that never materialized.</i></center> <P></P> <center><a data-pin-do="embedBoard" href="https://www.pinterest.com/amanandamouse/gloria-swanson/"data-pin-scale-width="80" data-pin-scale-height="200" data-pin-board-width="400"> Follow Michael,'s board Gloria Swanson on Pinterest.</a><!-- Please call pinit.js only once per page --><script type="text/javascript" async src="//assets.pinterest.com/js/pinit.js"></script></center> <P></P> <center><iframe src="https://archive.org/embed/SunsetBoulevardStarringGloriaSwansonAndWilliamHolden&playlist=1" width="500" height="300" frameborder="0" webkitallowfullscreen="true" mozallowfullscreen="true" allowfullscreen></iframe><br><i>The CBS Radio Network broadcast <b>Sunset Boulevard</b> on September 17, 1951<br>with the film's stars recreating their roles.</i></center> <hr>A Man and A Mousehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/14293145068448926466noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-1193350251627318318.post-2148254095285746512015-12-21T13:37:00.000-05:002015-12-21T15:23:38.190-05:00Gwen Verdon in Gentlemen Marry BrunettesAfter the 1953 success of <b>Gentlemen Prefer Blondes</b> starring Marilyn Monroe and Jane Russell as showgirls Lorelei Lee and Dorothy Shaw, United Artists bought the rights to <b>But Gentlemen Marry Brunettes</b>, the 1927 novel written as a sequel to the original 1925 book by author Anita Loos. <P></P> <center><a data-pin-do="embedPin" href="https://www.pinterest.com/pin/548876273315560266/"></a></center> <P></P> Jeanne Crain was signed to do the movie (retitled <b>Gentlemen Marry Brunettes</b>) with Richard Sale directing and Mary Loos (his wife and niece to the book's author) writing the screenplay. The novel's <i>continuing adventures of</i> storyline was dropped in favor of a completely new story about the Jones sisters rise to showgirl prominence in Paris. When Jane Russell's contract with Howard Hughes expired in 1954, she and her husband, Robert Waterfield, decided to form their own production company Russ-Field. The couple was courted by United Artists and offered a six picture deal - with the caveat that Jane star in <b>Gentlemen Marry Brunettes</b>. <P></P> <center><a data-pin-do="embedPin" href="https://www.pinterest.com/pin/548876273315560279/"></a></center> <P></P> Jane didn't like the idea of doing the sequel nor did she like the script but she agreed because United Artists allowed Russ-Field to join Sale and his company, Voyager, as producer although they had little say in the project. Among their concerns were the film's big Cinemascope and Technicolor budget (with Travilla gowns and location shoots) and how they were going to bring in the customers. Jane liked her co-star Jeanne Crain immensely but she was also aware that Crain was no Marilyn Monroe at the box-office; this left UA dependent on Russell to make the picture a financial success. <P></P> <center><a data-pin-do="embedPin" href="https://www.pinterest.com/pin/548876273315560387/"></a></center> <P></P> Ultimately Jane was greatly disappointed in <b>Gentlemen Marry Brunettes</b> and considered it a mess. And after viewing it, I can see she was right. Her pixie haircut makes Russell look old, the cannibal/blackface production number of <i>Ain't Misbehavin'</i> is just too weird for words and Crain is no foil for Russell. Inexplicably Russell plays the <i>dumb</i> showgirl and Crain the <i>smart</i> one; the film might've worked better had the parts been switched to more closely resemble the <b>Gentlemen Prefer Blondes</b> chemistry. Audiences of the day agreed with Russell's opinion and the (jukebox style) musical did poorly at the box-office when it was released in the fall of 1955. <P></P> <center><a data-pin-do="embedPin" href="https://www.pinterest.com/pin/548876273315560342/"></a></center> <P></P> Amidst all of this Gwen Verdon was hired to play a sexy French maid and had one scene in which her sexy moves were considered too obscene; the scene was cut and re-shot with a non-musical performer. This 25 seconds is the only glimpse left of Ms. Verdon's sexy moves in the 1955 film. <P></P> <center><iframe width="400" height="225" src="https://www.youtube.com/embed/fcWhumejlwg" frameborder="0" allowfullscreen></iframe></center> <P></P> <center><a data-pin-do="embedPin" href="https://www.pinterest.com/pin/548876273315561367/"></a></center> <P></P> <center><a data-pin-do="embedPin" href="https://www.pinterest.com/pin/548876273315561392/"></a></center> <HR>A Man and A Mousehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/14293145068448926466noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-1193350251627318318.post-64497881392420080992015-12-15T22:05:00.001-05:002015-12-15T22:21:55.033-05:00Watch and Wear: Oscar MicheauxOscar Micheaux was an African-American film director and author. At the time of their release, his black cast films were categorized as <i>race movies</i> and played only theaters that catered to African-American audiences. This post is to introduce you to his work rather than his biography - which can be read (in short) <a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Oscar_Micheaux" target="_blank">on his Wikipedia page</a>. Many of his films and books can be viewed and read (respectively) and downloaded from <a href="https://archive.org/search.php?query=oscar+micheaux" target="_blank">archive.org</a>. Posters from several of his films can be worn on <a href="https://crewdtees.com" target="_blank">crew d'tees t-shirts</a> - the only Oscar Micheaux fashion available! <UL><LI><a href="#films">Films</a></LI><LI><a href="#books">Books</a></LI><LI><a href="#tee">crew d'tees Shirts</a></LI></UL> <a name="films"></a><h3>Films</h3> <P></P> <center><iframe src="https://archive.org/embed/WithinOurGates" width="400" height="300" frameborder="0" webkitallowfullscreen="true" mozallowfullscreen="true" allowfullscreen></iframe><br><i><b>Within Our Gates</b>, 1920, silent</i></center> <P></P> <center><iframe src="https://archive.org/embed/TenMinutestoLive" width="400" height="300" frameborder="0" webkitallowfullscreen="true" mozallowfullscreen="true" allowfullscreen></iframe><br><i><b>Ten Minutes To Live</b>, 1932</i></center> <P></P> <center><iframe src="https://archive.org/embed/Murder_in_Harlem" width="400" height="300" frameborder="0" webkitallowfullscreen="true" mozallowfullscreen="true" allowfullscreen></iframe><br><i><b>Lem Hawkins' Confession</b> also released as <b>Murder in Harlem</b>, 1935</i></center> <P></P> <center><iframe src="https://archive.org/embed/swing-1938" width="400" height="300" frameborder="0" webkitallowfullscreen="true" mozallowfullscreen="true" allowfullscreen></iframe><br><i><b>Swing</b>, 1938</i></center> <P></P> <center><iframe src="https://archive.org/embed/lying_lips_ipod" width="400" height="300" frameborder="0" webkitallowfullscreen="true" mozallowfullscreen="true" allowfullscreen></iframe><br><i><b>Lying Lips</b>, 1939</i></center> <P></P> <center><a data-pin-do="embedPin" href="https://www.pinterest.com/pin/548876273315503110/"></a></center> <a name="books"></a><h3>Books</h3><P></P> <center><iframe src='https://archive.org/stream/conqueststoryofn00mich?ui=embed#page/n7/mode/2up' width='400px' height='358px' frameborder='0' ></iframe><br><i>Conquest: The Story of a Negro Pioneer</i> 1913</center> <P></P> <center><iframe src='https://archive.org/stream/forgednoteromanc00michrich?ui=embed#page/n5/mode/2up' width='400px' height='358px' frameborder='0' ></iframe><br><i>The Forged Note</i> 1915</center> <P></P> <center><iframe src='https://archive.org/stream/homesteaderanov00michgoog?ui=embed#page/n10/mode/2up' width='400px' height='358px' frameborder='0' ></iframe><br><i>The Homesteader: A Novel</i> 1917</center> <a name="tee"></a><h3>crew d'tees Shirts</h3><p><a href="http://crewdtees.com" target="_blank">crew d'tees</a> has created two t-shirts to honor the genius of this renaissance man and cinematic auteur.</p> <P></P> <center><a data-pin-do="embedPin" href="https://www.pinterest.com/pin/548876273315471133/"></a></center> <P></P> <center><a data-pin-do="embedPin" href="https://www.pinterest.com/pin/548876273315471118/"></a></center> <hr>A Man and A Mousehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/14293145068448926466noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-1193350251627318318.post-48652506169205395752015-08-02T21:57:00.000-04:002016-01-16T09:44:00.220-05:00From Tallulah Bankhead to Mary Martin<center><a data-pin-do="embedPin" href="https://www.pinterest.com/pin/548876273313344087/"></a></center> <P></P> In 1953 MGM distributed the independently produced <a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Main_Street_to_Broadway" target="_blank"><b>Main Street To Broadway</b></a> which (fictionally) documents the behind-the-scenes process of producing a dramatic play on Broadway from origination to opening. Despite the barest plot (attributed to Pulitzer Prize winning playwright/screenwriter Robert E. Sherwood), the producer managed to gather a stellar cast of theatre luminaries. Some of the ensemble play themselves in small scenes that have nothing to do with the plot and some play parts in the screenplay by Samson Raphaelson (Ernst Lubitsch's screenwriter). <P></P> <center><a data-pin-do="embedPin" href="https://www.pinterest.com/pin/548876273313753162/"></a></center> <P></P> The story concerns playwright Tony Monaco writing a play in which he hopes Tallulah Bankhead will star. (Tom Morton plays Tony Monaco, a few years before he took the stage name Tony Monaco and toured in the national company of <b>I Can Get It For You Wholesale</b>.) He meets actress Mary Craig (Mary Murphy from <b>The Wild One</b>) who is ready to quit the New York theatrical scene and go back to South Terre Haute to marry. They fight, they kiss and they fall in love only to be separated by their different worlds. <P></P> <center><a data-pin-do="embedPin" href="https://www.pinterest.com/pin/548876273313749159/"></a></center> <P></P> If for no other reason, this film exists to allow Tallulah Bankhead to caricature herself - something she did often in real life but rarely on screen. Monaco is persuaded by his agent (played by Agnes Moorehead) to write a play that shows off Bankhead as a normal American housewife. (At one point, Bankhead opines "Aren't they writing plays for nice people like ME ANYMORE?!?!") He goes home with Mary - actually follows her in a stalky type thing - and literally dreams up <b>Calico and Lust</b> after watching Mary's parents (Rosemary DeCamp and Clinton Sundberg) living their life. In the dream, Tallulah is dressed in calico and an apron, sewing and welcoming neighbors to the door (although it ultimately turns into a camp version of a Bankhead-type melodrama). <P></P> <center><iframe width="400" height="300" src="https://www.youtube.com/embed/JgmKGFPicrc?rel=0" frameborder="0" allowfullscreen></iframe><br><i>All Tallulah's scenes in a badly digitized TV rip<br><b>See below if you want a good version</b></i></center> <P></P> Another fascinating scenario concerns the evolution of the Richard Rodgers and Oscar Hammerstein II song <i>There's Music In You</i>. From Hammerstein's lyrical inspiration after seeing playwright Tony and Mary kissing on the street to Rodgers plunking out a tune while Hammerstein sings to the final incorporation of the finished song by Mary Martin in a new (fictional) musical, these scenes mark the only time the two musical geniuses appeared on screen. <i>There's Music In You</i> was written especially for <b>Main Street To Broadway</b> and was considered <a href="http://www.rnh.com/news/554/Adding-More-To-Cinderella-s-Score-It-s-Possible " target="_blank">a trunk song (term for a songwriter's stash of unused material) until 1997 when it was interpolated into the new television production of <b>Cinderella</b> and sung by Whitney Houston</a>. The song was also used in the 2013 Broadway production of <b>Cinderella</b>. <P></P> <center><b>From Tallulah Bankhead to Mary Martin continues after the WORLD INTERNET PREMIERE<br>of the Mary Martin Sings There's Music In You video compilation.</b></center> <HR size="10" color="purple" width="60%"> <center><iframe width="400" height="300" src="https://www.youtube.com/embed/1T49Pioe8CM" frameborder="0" allowfullscreen></iframe><br><i>Richard Rodgers, Oscar Hammerstein II and Mary Martin in<br>There's Music In You. Note the spelling of 'Rogers' name in the call board.</i></center> <HR size="10" color="purple" width="60%"> <b>Main Street To Broadway</b> also has the following scenes and attributes. <UL><LI>Helen Hayes instructs a young actress how to focus before introducing the film and discussing the soon-to-be-demolished Empire Theatre. She returns to narrate the play's opening and list the luminaries attending.<P></P> <center><a data-pin-do="embedPin" href="https://www.pinterest.com/pin/548876273315875054/"></a></center> <P></P></LI><LI>Shirley Booth talks with, and signs autographs for, fans and demonstrates why she is so beloved. (See <a href="http://AManAndAMouse.blogspot.com/2015/02/hazel-maid-with-most.html" target="_blank"><b>Hazel: The Maid With The Most</b></a> and See <a href="http://3linesabout.blogspot.com/2014/11/miss-shirley-booth.html" target="_blank"><b>Miss Shirley Booth</b></a> for more information.<P></P> <center><a data-pin-do="embedPin" href="https://www.pinterest.com/pin/548876273313752022/"></a></center> <P></P></LI><LI>Cornel Wilde acts in a workshop reading of the playwright's somewhat misogynistic first play with ingenue Mary.</LI><LI>Rex Harrison and then-wife actress Lilli Palmer discuss what's in their refrigerator; Rex wants a bagel and salami.</LI><LI>Radio and television's Molly Goldberg, Gertrude Berg, plays Tony's motherly landlady.</LI><LI>Ethel Barrymore, Lionel Barrymore and Louis Calhern bail the despondent playwright out of jail and offer him hope after Bankhead rejects the new play.</LI><LI>John Van Druten works with Constance Carpenter (as Anna) and the cast of the still running <b>The King And I</b> which he had directed the year before.</LI><LI>Al Hirschfeld draws one of his trademark caricatures.<P></P> <center><a data-pin-do="embedPin" href="https://www.pinterest.com/pin/548876273313749240/"></a></center> <P></P></LI><LI>New York Giants manager Leo Durocher gets a dugout scolding from Tallulah.</LI><LI>After having testified for the House Un-American Activities Committee, Jack Gilford was hired to play behind the bars of the theatre box office as treasurer.</LI><LI><a href="https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vG3vF-5bUw4" target="_blank">Humorist Herb Shriner</a>, father of director Wil (<b>Frasier</b>) and actor Kin (<b>General Hospital</b>), sympathetically plays Mary's hometown boyfriend.</LI><LI>Academy Award winner James Wong Howe was cinematographer for <b>Main Street To Broadway</b>.<P></P> <center><a data-pin-do="embedPin" href="https://www.pinterest.com/pin/548876273313344139/"></a></center> <P></P></LI></UL> <b>Main Street To Broadway</b> has never been released on DVD. It was released on VHS tape - a used version of which you can buy on Amazon from a third party for $100. Or you can <a href="mailto:amanandamouse@sbcglobl.net">send me an email</a> and I can send you link to download a nice rip of the VHS for free. Your choice. <P></P> <center><iframe width="400" height="225" src="https://www.youtube.com/embed/CYG6f_Xw2Ps?rel=0" frameborder="0" allowfullscreen></iframe><br><i>Mary Martin's studio version of There's Music In You</i></center> <P></P> <center><a data-pin-do="embedPin" href="https://www.pinterest.com/pin/548876273313344167/"></a></center> <P></P> <center><a data-pin-do="embedPin" href="https://www.pinterest.com/pin/548876273313752066/"></a></center> <P></P> <center><a data-pin-do="embedPin" href="https://www.pinterest.com/pin/548876273313752501/"></a></center> <P></P> <center><iframe width="400" height="300" src="https://www.youtube.com/embed/3SywIvkReQ8?rel=0" frameborder="0" allowfullscreen></iframe><br><i>Whitney Houston's version of There's Music In You 1997</i></center> <P></P> <HR>A Man and A Mousehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/14293145068448926466noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-1193350251627318318.post-57306548609700516182015-07-12T21:11:00.002-04:002015-07-13T12:04:53.289-04:00The High Bridge, New YorkThe High Bridge (originally the Aqueduct Bridge) is the oldest bridge in New York City. On June 9, 2015 it reopened as a pedestrian and bicycle thruway after being closed for over 40 years. It connects The Bronx and Manhattan over the Harlem River. The eastern end is located in the Highbridge section of The Bronx near the western end of West 170th Street, and the western end is located in Highbridge Park in Manhattan, roughly Washington Heights. These are pictures taken on a walk over the bridge on July 11, 2015. <P></P> <center><a data-pin-do="embedPin" href="https://www.pinterest.com/pin/548876273313440320/"></a></center> <P></P> <center><a data-pin-do="embedPin" href="https://www.pinterest.com/pin/548876273313440311/"></a></center> <P></P> <center><a data-pin-do="embedPin" href="https://www.pinterest.com/pin/548876273313440300/"></a></center> <P></P> <center><a data-pin-do="embedPin" href="https://www.pinterest.com/pin/548876273313440284/"></a></center> <P></P> <center><a data-pin-do="embedPin" href="https://www.pinterest.com/pin/548876273313440267/"></a><p></p>The High Bridge Water Tower was built in 1866-72, and was accompanied by a 7-acre reservoir. The High Bridge system reached its full capacity by 1875 and, with the opening of the Croton Aqueduct, the High Bridge system was less relied upon. During World War I it was shut down. In 1949 the tower was removed from service, and a carillon (bell) was installed in 1958. The tower was damaged by arson in 1984. It was restored in 1989-90.</center> <P></P> <center><a data-pin-do="embedPin" href="https://www.pinterest.com/pin/548876273313440247/"></a></center> <P></P> <center><a data-pin-do="embedPin" href="https://www.pinterest.com/pin/548876273313440235/"></a></center> <P></P> <center><a data-pin-do="embedPin" href="https://www.pinterest.com/pin/548876273313440224/"></a></center> <P></P> <center><a data-pin-do="embedPin" href="https://www.pinterest.com/pin/548876273313440215/"></a></center> <P></P> <center><a data-pin-do="embedPin" href="https://www.pinterest.com/pin/548876273313440205/"></a></center> <P></P> <center><a data-pin-do="embedPin" href="https://www.pinterest.com/pin/548876273313440195/"></a></center> <P></P> <center><a data-pin-do="embedPin" href="https://www.pinterest.com/pin/548876273313440178/"></a></center> <P></P> <center><a data-pin-do="embedPin" href="https://www.pinterest.com/pin/548876273313440171/"></a></center> <P></P> <center><a data-pin-do="embedPin" href="https://www.pinterest.com/pin/548876273313440135/"></a></center> <P></P> <center><a data-pin-do="embedPin" href="https://www.pinterest.com/pin/548876273313440125/"></a></center> <P></P> <center><a data-pin-do="embedPin" href="https://www.pinterest.com/pin/548876273313440081/"></a></center> <P></P> <center><a data-pin-do="embedPin" href="https://www.pinterest.com/pin/548876273313440049/"></a><p></p>Is this the last remaining Howard Johnson's Motel in existence? It's on The Bronx side of the High Bridge.</center> <P></P> <center><a data-pin-do="embedPin" href="https://www.pinterest.com/pin/548876273313440665/"></a></center> <HR> A Man and A Mousehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/14293145068448926466noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-1193350251627318318.post-12386597328609879372015-07-04T23:45:00.000-04:002015-07-05T12:39:01.247-04:00Watch and Wear: Florence Lawrence<P></P> <center><a data-pin-do="embedPin" href="https://www.pinterest.com/pin/548876273313312229/"></a></center> <P></P> She made more movies than Bette Davis and Katherine Hepburn combined. She was more recognized by moviegoers than Meryl Streep. She equaled Hedy Lamarr by inventing something society still uses to this day. And she had plastic surgery before Joan Rivers made it vogue. Yet no one remembers her: <i>The Biograph Girl</i>, <i>The Imp Girl</i>, <i>The Girl of a Thousand Faces</i>. Historically, she is referred to as the first <i>Movie Star</i> but it was the early 20th century before actors and characters were documented on film stock. Anonymously, she was so loved that the American public demanded to know her name and soon they found out: Florence Lawrence. <P></P> <center><iframe src="https://archive.org/embed/shrew" width="400" height="300" frameborder="0" webkitallowfullscreen="true" mozallowfullscreen="true" allowfullscreen></iframe><br><i>The Taming Of The Shrew 1908</i></center> <P></P> Florence started performing on stage and in vaudeville as <i>Baby Florence, the Child Wonder</i> before finding work as an extra for the American Mutoscope and Biograph Company in the fledgling film industry of turn of the century New York City. D.W. Griffith was her director and Billy Bitzer her cinematographer. Her natural abilities turned into bigger parts and the public started writing letters to Biograph asking who she was. Florence was soon hired by the Independent Moving Picture Company (IMP). The company even capitalized on her fame by referring to her in IMP advertisements as <i>The Biograph Girl</i>. It was this marketing move by IMP that forced other film production companies to start advertising the names and faces of the actors appearing in their pictures. <P></P> <center><a data-pin-do="embedPin" href="https://www.pinterest.com/pin/548876273313312414/"></a></center> <P></P> <center><iframe src="https://archive.org/embed/TheLureOfTheGown" width="400" height="300" frameborder="0" webkitallowfullscreen="true" mozallowfullscreen="true" allowfullscreen></iframe><br><i>The Lure Of The Gown 1909</i></center> <P></P> Before these production companies followed suit though, they tried to nip it in the bud by announcing to the national press that Miss. Lawrence, <i>The Biograph Girl</i>, had been killed in an automobile accident. Lawrence's pictures and the story were plastered all over the national newspapers. The story was so ensconced in the mindset of the film-going public that she had to travel to St. Louis (where the story originated) to quell the rumors of her demise. The plan worked but by her own admission Florence took a sabbatical from motion pictures starting in 1913. <P></P> <center><iframe src='https://archive.org/stream/FlorenceLawrenceStory?ui=embed#mode/2up' width='480px' height='430px' frameborder='0' ></iframe><br><i><b>Growing Up With The Movies</b> is the story of Florence’s early career<br>as told to writer Monte M. Katterjohn. This PDF (also <a href="https://archive.org/details/FlorenceLawrenceStory" target="_blank">accessible on archive.org</a>)<br>contains all four parts as published in Photoplay magazine issues<br>dated November/December 1914 and January/February 1915.</i></center> <P></P> <center><a data-pin-do="embedPin" href="https://www.pinterest.com/pin/548876273308725156/"></a></center> <P></P> <center><iframe src="https://archive.org/embed/TheCountryDoctor1909" width="400" height="300" frameborder="0" webkitallowfullscreen="true" mozallowfullscreen="true" allowfullscreen></iframe><br><i>The Country Doctor 1909</i></center> <P></P> According to Kelly R. Brown’s 1999 biography <b>The Biograph Girl</b>, Florence was able to afford an automobile. In 1914, she developed a mechanical signaling arm that, with the press of a button, raised or lowered a flag on the car’s rear bumper that signaled which way the car would turn. She also devised a brake signal that worked on the same principle: with the press of a button, a “STOP” sign flipped up from the back bumper. Because Florence never bothered to file patents, unlike <a href="http://3linesabout.blogspot.com/2014/01/hedy-lamarr-as-nymphomaniac.html" target="_blank">Hedy Lamarr</a>, she never got the recognition she deserved. (Her mother, also an inventor, patented the first electrical windshield wipers in 1917 but never got credit either.) <P></P> <center><a data-pin-do="embedPin" href="https://www.pinterest.com/pin/548876273313313640/"></a></center> <P></P> Florence did attempt a comeback in 1922 by starring in <b>The Unfoldment</b> but nothing much came of it. It was around this time she reportedly got a nose job to help in procuring work. She ultimately found work at M-G-M usually in uncredited bit parts. In 1937, she was diagnosed with a disease described a rare bone marrow disease which was incurable at the time. On December 28, 1938, Florence called in sick and some time in the afternoon swallowed cough syrup and ant paste. She was found by a neighbor and was rushed to Beverly Hills Emergency Hospital where she was pronounced dead at 2:45 p.m. A suicide note found in her home was addressed to her housemate Bob Brinlow and stated: <center><blockquote> <i>Dear Bob, <P></P> Call Dr. Wilson. I am tired. Hope this works. Good bye, my darling. They can't cure me, so let it go at that. Lovingly, Florence - P.S. You've all been swell guys. Everything is yours.</i> </blockquote></center> <P></P> <center><a data-pin-do="embedPin" href="https://www.pinterest.com/pin/548876273313312610/"></a></center> <P></P> Lawrence's death was ruled a "probable suicide" owing to her "ill health" and she was buried in an unmarked grave in the Hollywood Cemetery (now Hollywood Forever Cemetery). In 1991 an anonymous British actor paid for a memorial marker which reads <i>The Biograph Girl/The First Movie Star</i>. In 2000 William J. Mann published <b>The Biograph Girl</b> which blends the facts of Lawrence's life with fiction. Instead of fading into oblivion and committing suicide, a doctor helps Lawrence fool the public into thinking she committed suicide but instead lives at a nursing home. A journalist discovers Lawrence at the nursing home and decides to write a biography about her. In 2013, the Gale Theatre Company introduced <a href="http://www.austinmonthly.com/AM/Calendar/index.php/name/Florence-Presented-by-Gale-Theatre-Company/event/12593/" target=_blank"><b>Florence</b> which tells her story <i>through dance, video, and physical theater</i></a>. <P></P> <center><a data-pin-do="embedPin" href="https://www.pinterest.com/pin/548876273312716494/"></a></center> <P></P> <center><a data-pin-do="embedPin" href="https://www.pinterest.com/pin/548876273313312553/"></a></center> <P></P> <center><a data-pin-do="embedBoard" href="https://www.pinterest.com/amanandamouse/florence-lawrence/"data-pin-scale-width="80" data-pin-scale-height="200" data-pin-board-width="400"></a><!-- Please call pinit.js only once per page --><script type="text/javascript" async src="//assets.pinterest.com/js/pinit.js"></script></center> <P></P> <center><iframe width="420" height="315" src="https://www.youtube.com/embed/7sFy9wyHHeo?rel=0" frameborder="0" allowfullscreen></iframe></center> <HR>A Man and A Mousehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/14293145068448926466noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-1193350251627318318.post-28909777489738006932015-06-27T23:18:00.000-04:002015-06-27T23:18:03.922-04:00Costa Rica 2004In March, 2004, a group of friends went to Costa Rica. We left only footprints and returned with only memories - and these pictures. <br /><center><img src="http://www.amanandamouse.com/gallery/costarica/slide2.jpg" width="405"></center><br /><br /><center><img src="http://www.amanandamouse.com/gallery/costarica/slide3.jpg" width="405"></center><br /><br /><center><img src="http://www.amanandamouse.com/gallery/costarica/slide4.jpg" width="405"></center><br /><br /><center><img src="http://www.amanandamouse.com/gallery/costarica/slide8.jpg" width="405"></center><br /><br /><center><img src="http://www.amanandamouse.com/gallery/costarica/slide14.jpg" width="405"></center><br /><br /><center><img src="http://www.amanandamouse.com/gallery/costarica/slide19.jpg" width="405"></center><br /><br /><center><img src="http://www.amanandamouse.com/gallery/costarica/slide23.jpg" width="405"></center><br /><br /><center><img src="http://www.amanandamouse.com/gallery/costarica/slide24.jpg" width="405"></center><br /><br /><center><img src="http://www.amanandamouse.com/gallery/costarica/slide29.jpg" width="405"></center><br /><br /><center><img src="http://www.amanandamouse.com/gallery/costarica/slide30.jpg" width="405"></center><br /><br /><center><img src="http://www.amanandamouse.com/gallery/costarica/slide31.jpg" width="405"></center><br /><br /><center><img src="http://www.amanandamouse.com/gallery/costarica/slide32.jpg" width="405"></center><br /><br /><center><img src="http://www.amanandamouse.com/gallery/costarica/slide34.jpg" width="405"></center><br /><br /><center><img src="http://www.amanandamouse.com/gallery/costarica/slide35.jpg" width="405"></center><br /><br /><center><img src="http://www.amanandamouse.com/gallery/costarica/slide38.jpg" width="405"></center><br /><br /><center><img src="http://www.amanandamouse.com/gallery/costarica/slide41.jpg" width="405"></center><br /><br /><center><img src="http://www.amanandamouse.com/gallery/costarica/slide43.jpg" width="405"></center><br /><br /><center><img src="http://www.amanandamouse.com/gallery/costarica/slide48.jpg" width="405"></center><br /><br /><center><img src="http://www.amanandamouse.com/gallery/costarica/slide50.jpg" width="405"></center><br /><br /><center><img src="http://www.amanandamouse.com/gallery/costarica/slide56.jpg" width="405"></center><br /><br /><center><img src="http://www.amanandamouse.com/gallery/costarica/slide58.jpg" width="405"></center><br /><br /><center><img src="http://www.amanandamouse.com/gallery/costarica/slide62.jpg" width="405"></center><br /><br /><center><img src="http://www.amanandamouse.com/gallery/costarica/slide67.jpg" width="405"></center><br /><br /><center><img src="http://www.amanandamouse.com/gallery/costarica/slide80.jpg" width="405"></center><br /><br /><center><img src="http://www.amanandamouse.com/gallery/costarica/slide76.jpg" width="405"></center><br /><br /><center><b>See the rest of the pictures on my Pinterest board.</b></center><br /><br /><center><a data-pin-do="embedBoard" href="https://www.pinterest.com/amanandamouse/costa-rica-2004/"data-pin-scale-width="80" data-pin-scale-height="200" data-pin-board-width="400">See the rest of the pictures on my Pinterest board.</a><!-- Please call pinit.js only once per page --><script type="text/javascript" async src="//assets.pinterest.com/js/pinit.js"></script> </center>A Man and A Mousehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/14293145068448926466noreply@blogger.com1tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-1193350251627318318.post-45293382112295457012015-06-16T22:53:00.000-04:002015-06-16T23:15:05.372-04:00The Legend of Walks Far RaquelRaquel Welch had a bee in her bonnet regarding her 1979 television acting debut <b>The Legend Of Walks Far Woman</b>; she wanted people to see it. But NBC Entertainment president Brandon Tartikoff saw no commercial potential, and shelved it when it was delivered to the network. This was especially disappointing to Welch who fought hard to get the film made and who co-produced it under the Raquel Welch Productions banner. <P></P> <center><a data-pin-do="embedPin" href="https://www.pinterest.com/pin/548876273313040542/"></a></center> <P></P> The novel <b>Walks Far Woman</b> by Colin Stuart tells a tale based on the life of his great grandmother. From this novel, Evan Hunter (author of <b>The Blackboard Jungle</b> and <b>The Birds</b> screenplay) fashioned the teleplay of Walks Far, a Blackfoot woman forced to leave her tribe after killing to avenge her husband's death. She meets up with, and joins, a Sioux tribe where she is accepted until banished (again) for killing her violent Sioux husband. It was 1979 when Raquel Welch, Bradford Dillman, Nick Mancuso, director Mel Damski and the rest of production team descended upon Montana (including Billings, Red Lodge and Hardin) to film this epic Western that followed the story of Walks Far from 1874 until her death in 1953. <P></P> <center><a data-pin-do="embedPin" href="https://www.pinterest.com/pin/548876273313040544/"></a><a data-pin-do="embedPin" href="https://www.pinterest.com/pin/548876273313040559/"></a></center> <P></P> <b>The Legend Of Walks Far Woman</b> was filmed as a three-hour television movie and, except for the stars, all actors were either Native or Mexican Americans. The lifestyle of the Indians - <i>wild and free on the prairies</i> - is the backdrop and the film doesn't shy away from brutality and doesn't pander to American Indian stereotypes, portraying them with failings and virtues. By the film's end, Welch ages to 103 with Del Armstrong and Hallie Smith-Simmons applying her makeup. <P></P> <center><a data-pin-do="embedPin" href="https://www.pinterest.com/pin/548876273313040595/"></a></center> <P></P> For three years, the film sat collecting dust but Welch and her lawyers never gave up. In 1982, it was edited to two and a half hours and given a time slot on May 30. Before it had a chance to air though the last reel was ditched and an end with 20 seconds of the 103 year old Walks Far added with a voiceover to fill in the gaps. The resulting film is disjointed and the ending just ridiculous. The greatest asset is the locale and Raquel Welch's performance which begins haltingly but warms up nicely. (A weird anomaly is hearing the characters speak <i>about</i> speaking the Indian language when they are clearly speaking English.) <P></P> <center><a data-pin-do="embedPin" href="https://www.pinterest.com/pin/548876273313041582/"></a></center> <P></P> The version that aired was, much to Tartikoff's chagrin, a ratings success. According to reports of the time, Tartikoff appeared before the nation's TV critics in Burbank the day after the movie aired and described receiving a 7 a.m. call from NBC's New York offices. <i>It was a call giving me the overnight ratings shares for the top three markets</i> Tartikoff said <i>and for <b>The Legend of Walks Far Woman</b>, they were something like 36, 24 and 36. I said "Great -- she got her measurements."</i> <P></P> <center><a data-pin-do="embedPin" href="https://www.pinterest.com/pin/548876273313041562/"></a><a data-pin-do="embedPin" href="https://www.pinterest.com/pin/548876273313041559/"></a><P></P><i><a href="http://billingsgazette.com/special-section/gazette-125/raquel-welch/image_00d386ca-5545-11df-9dbe-001cc4c002e0.html#ixzz3dGtF2ica" target="_blank">Welch stayed at the Northern Hotel in Billings while filming in the summer of 1979. She escaped the notice of many who had gathered to see her deplane at the Billings airport, but signed autographs after reaching her car.</a></i></center> <P></P> <center><a data-pin-do="embedPin" href="https://www.pinterest.com/pin/548876273313041150/"></a></center> <P></P> Welch probably does not approve of the truncated version of the film although it's high ratings probably made her happy. In 1983, she also won a won a Bronze Wrangler at the Western Heritage Awards and a Nosotros Golden Eagle (for Hispanic achievements in the entertainment industry) for her role. <b>The Legend Of Walks Far Woman</b> was released on VHS tape in several countries. It has never been released on DVD in the United States although Australia and Spain seem to have copies floating around. It's hard to tell whether these are bootlegs or official releases. <P></P> <HR size="10" color="purple" width="60%"> <center><i><b>FREE DOWNLOAD:</b> I have a digital copy of <b>The Legend Of Walks Far Woman</b>.<br>It's 115 minutes and even with all the edits, it would behoove any fan of Raquel Welch to drop me an email.<br>I will then send you link from which you can download it.</i></center> <HR size="10" color="purple" width="60%"> <P></P> <center><a data-pin-do="embedPin" href="https://www.pinterest.com/pin/548876273313041248/"></a></center> <P></P> <center><a data-pin-do="embedBoard" href="https://www.pinterest.com/amanandamouse/walks-far/"data-pin-scale-width="80" data-pin-scale-height="200" data-pin-board-width="400">Follow Michael,'s board Walks Far on Pinterest.</a><!-- Please call pinit.js only once per page --><script type="text/javascript" async src="//assets.pinterest.com/js/pinit.js"></script><p></p><i>Two dumb review links from People Magazine 1982: <a href="http://www.people.com/people/archive/article/0,,20083879,00.html" target="_blank">1</a> and <a href="http://www.people.com/people/archive/article/0,,20082244,00.html" target="_blank">2</a></i></center> <P></P> <hr>A Man and A Mousehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/14293145068448926466noreply@blogger.com18tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-1193350251627318318.post-36588311071346058652015-06-03T11:17:00.002-04:002015-06-04T08:32:22.557-04:00Thanks For The Mammaries, Jim Bailey<center><a data-pin-do="embedPin" href="https://www.pinterest.com/pin/548876273312849364/"></a></center> <P></P> According to <a href="http://www.playbill.com/news/article/jim-bailey-impersonator-of-broadway-divas-dies-at-77-350452" target="_blank">Playbill</a>, <a href="http://www.jimbaileyweb.com/" target="_blank"><b>Jim Bailey</b></a> <P></P> <blockquote>'...dreamed of playing Broadway, and in 2001 landed a commitment from the Shubert Organization to open his biographical revue, <i>Judy Garland Live!</i> at one of its theatres on Oct. 16 of that year--50 years to the day after the real Garland opened a legendary stand at the Palace Theatre. The production was far along, with Joey McKneely signed to direct and choreograph and Ann Hould-Ward (Beauty and the Beast) providing the costumes. But after repeated delays the production failed to complete its capitalization and was finally "indefinitely" postponed.'</blockquote> Jim Bailey might not have 'played' Broadway (although in a 2009 interview he said he was in the chorus of several Broadway shows) but he certainly 'played' the dames that played Broadway. RIP. <P></P> <center><iframe width="400" height="300" src="https://www.youtube.com/embed/5h2gYb_Y6jM" frameborder="0" allowfullscreen></iframe><br><i>Interesting to see how Carol Burnett sets Jim's performance up<br>for his first appearance on <b>The Carol Burnett Show</b>. First she<br>introduces Jim in a tuxedo, explains what he does with pictures,<br>and finally introduces his performance in full drag. Probably the<br>only way to get female impersonation on television back in 1972.<br>Kudos to Carol for introducing Jim to America.</i></center> <P></P> <center><a data-pin-do="embedPin" href="https://www.pinterest.com/pin/548876273312849376/"></a><a data-pin-do="embedPin" href="https://www.pinterest.com/pin/548876273312849368/"></a></center> <P></P> <center><a data-pin-do="embedPin" href="https://www.pinterest.com/pin/548876273312849355/"></a><a data-pin-do="embedPin" href="https://www.pinterest.com/pin/548876273312849000/"></a></center> <P></P> <center><a data-pin-do="embedPin" href="https://www.pinterest.com/pin/548876273312851500/"></a><a data-pin-do="embedPin" href="https://www.pinterest.com/pin/548876273312849352/"></a></center> <hr>A Man and A Mousehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/14293145068448926466noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-1193350251627318318.post-83188783586283762492015-05-28T17:43:00.002-04:002015-05-28T18:01:23.255-04:00Little Natasha Ryan Cried Last NightFor television movies in the 1970s, the go-to actress to play an emotionally and physically abused little girl was <a href="http://www.imdb.com/name/nm0752757/?ref_=tt_cl_t8" target="_blank"><b>Natasha Ryan</b></a>. In films like <b>Sybil</b> (playing the title role as a little girl), <b>The Amityville Horror</b> and <b>The Entity</b> (taunted by spirits with James Brolin and Barbara Hershey respectively), the appealing Ms. Ryan left an indelible impression on those who watched her cinematic abuse. <P></P> <center><a data-pin-do="embedPin" href="https://www.pinterest.com/pin/548876273312773829/"></a></center> <P></P> Natasha's most poignant role might be the engrossing and depressing <b>Mary Jane Harper Cried Last Night</b>, in which the child is physically abused by Susan Dey. The television movie (written by Joanna Lee who also wrote Dey's <b>Cage Without A Key</b>) also stars Kevin McCarthy, Priscilla Pointer, Rhea Perlman, Bernie Casey and Tricia O'Neil. It's on YouTube in seven parts and watching it again made me wonder what happened to the embattled Natasha Ryan. <P></P> <center><iframe width="400" height="300" src="https://www.youtube.com/embed/uPdx_7Cvy-k?rel=0" frameborder="0" allowfullscreen></iframe></center> <P></P> Ryan's last film role was in 1983. The rest of her story was documented in this interview by Cindy Bellinger (who died of cancer in 2012) for the <i>Santa Fe New Mexican</i>. It was published on August 1, 2007 and titled <b>Down the Street: Former Actress Finds Comfort in Glorieta</b>. <P></P> <center><a data-pin-do="embedPin" href="https://www.pinterest.com/pin/548876273312773700/"></a></center> <P></P> <blockquote><i>This is a story about heading one place and ending up somewhere else. Natasha Ryan left Southern California nearly 14 years ago. "I was on my way to Canada and decided to stop three places," said Ryan. "One was Santa Fe. I liked it, so I stayed for a while. But I was curious about Wisconsin. So I tried that, too. But I came back to Santa Fe." Ryan was 23 at the time. <P></P> Now 37, she lives atop a mountain in a cabin with no running water or electricity, but it's home - maybe the only place she's been able to call home since she was a child. "I didn't have a pretty childhood," said Ryan, who was raised by a foster family. Ryan said she worked in movies and television starting at the age of 1; by the time she was 13, she had appeared in 16 movies and television series. TV shows on her resume include Starsky and Hutch and movies include The Entity and The Day Time Ended. From 1975 to 1980 she played the young Hope Alice Williams in the soap opera Days of Our Lives. In 1976, at the age of 6, she played the role of young Sybil in the TV movie about a woman with multiple-personality disorder. When she turned 13, things changed. <P></p> <center><a data-pin-do="embedPin" href="https://www.pinterest.com/pin/548876273312773846/"></a></center> <P></P> "Overnight I became a really fat, pimply, ugly kid, and I wanted to be like other 13-year-olds," she said. "I wanted a mohawk. I wanted to dye my hair and pierce everything. They wouldn't even let you get a tan in the summer. So I quit making movies." Ryan said she was kicked out of her foster home and ended up living on the streets in Venice, Calif. "The whole time I tried not compromising my morals for a burrito, and I tried to sleep," she said. "That's not an easy thing to do for a 14- year-old girl, to find a safe place to sleep." A few others on the streets became her protectors. "I called home several times, but my foster mother wouldn't let me come back," Ryan said. "So I continued living in an old brick building, The Ellison, with a working gigolo and drug addicts." <P></P> <center><a data-pin-do="embedPin" href="https://www.pinterest.com/pin/548876273312773690/"></a></center> <P></P> Many Web sites are devoted to Ryan. "My 15-year-old daughter, Sienna - I named her after a crayon - told me there are a lot of Web sites about me. But I'm completely computer illiterate (and) haven't seen them." After years of doing the "Santa Fe shuffle" - working various jobs such as blowing glass, working with silver and leather and coaching in a gym - Ryan now works in construction. "I fell into the manhole of construction," she said. She and her crew do solar construction, plastering and anything else that needs to be done, and she saves every cent for her daughter's education. "Sienna is 15 and goes to Desert Academy," Ryan said. "Her passion is acting. Guess she got the gene." Her daughter's father lives in Santa Fe, and Ryan said Sienna spends more time there. "She's embarrassed about living in a hippie shack and bringing her friends here," she said. "But I hope some day she'll become part of a back-to-the-Earth revival and thank me." <P></P> Ryan found her land in Glorieta when she was teaching a friend's daughter to drive. They went up a steep road and learned the land at the top was for sale. That was that. She said she lives frugally to save money. But some of her earnings will soon be spent on a Russian turtle she got as a gift. "It's only 6 months old, but it needs a climate that's constantly 90 degrees," she said. In the house, all the solar power goes to him. "It's this little guy that'll probably force me onto the grid so I can keep him cozy," Ryan said. "And I'm ready to take a shower in my own house."</i></blockquote> Nice to read that little Natasha Ryan is not crying anymore. <P></P> <center><a data-pin-do="embedPin" href="https://www.pinterest.com/pin/548876273312774020/"></a></center> <hr>A Man and A Mousehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/14293145068448926466noreply@blogger.com7tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-1193350251627318318.post-75317139881390803182015-04-15T20:21:00.000-04:002016-01-18T10:19:52.986-05:00How Clara Bow Broke Into The Movies<P></P> <center><a data-pin-do="embedPin" href="https://www.pinterest.com/pin/548876273307200131/"></a></center> <P></P> <b>How I Broke Into The Movies</b> was published in 1930 and contains articles on the title theme written by movie stars of the day like Laura LaPlante, Jean Hersholt, Douglas Fairbanks, Dolores Costello, Richard Dix, Leatrice Joy, and 53 other notable actors. As time goes by, I will be publishing these articles under the umbrella label WORLD INTERNET PREMIERE - because they are. <P></P> <center><a data-pin-do="embedPin" href="https://www.pinterest.com/pin/548876273312224791/"></a></center> <P></P> The first article from the book was published in my <a href="http://amanandamouse.blogspot.com/2014/10/how-marion-davies-broke-into-movies.html" target="_blank">blography on Marion Davies</a>. The second article was published in my <a href="http://amanandamouse.blogspot.com/2014/12/how-colleen-moore-broke-into-movies.html" target="_blank">blography on Colleen Moore</a> - which also announced the WORLD INTERNET PREMIERE of the Moore's 1925 silent film <b>Ella Cinders</b> - newly scored with jazz music of the 1920s. This latest upload reveals the story of how Clara Bow, another flapper of the silent screen (and boisterous actress of many sound films) broke into the movies - in her own words. <P></P> <center><a data-pin-do="embedPin" href="https://www.pinterest.com/pin/548876273311908621/"></a></center> <P></P> Clara Bow is most famous for her performance as the perky and gregarious shop girl in <b>IT</b> and for then becoming known as the <b>IT</b> girl because of it. Elinor Glyn is the English novelist who wrote the book and the screenplay based on it. (Many of her books <a href="https://archive.org/search.php?query=elinor%20glyn" target="_blank">are available to read on archive.org</a>.) <i>With <b>IT</b>, you win all men if you are a woman and all women if you are a man. <b>IT</b> can be a quality of the mind as well as a physical attraction.</i> Although she is credited with the invention of the term, the concept predates Glyn's book and movie but it was Clara who caused it to have a huge impact on the culture of the 1920s. <P></P><center><iframe width="420" height="315" src="https://www.youtube.com/embed/S4MOQSRC_bM?rel=0" frameborder="0" allowfullscreen></iframe><br><I><B>IT</B> the full movie starring Clara Bow</I></center> <P></P> <center><b>How Clara Bow Broke Into The Movies continues after the<br>WORLD INTERNET PREMIERE of How I Broke Into The Movies by Clara Bow.</b></center> <HR size="10" color="purple" width="60%"> <center><img src="http://www.amanandamouse.com/blogspot/BrokeIntoMovies/ClaraBow/ClaraBowPic037.jpg" width="350" /><br><i><b>How I Broke Into The Movies</b> Clara Bow picture<br>Right click to open the image in a new tab.</i></center> <P></P> <center><img src="http://www.amanandamouse.com/blogspot/BrokeIntoMovies/ClaraBow/ClaraBowText036.jpg" width="350" /><br><i><b>How I Broke Into The Movies</b> by Clara Bow<br>Right click to open the image in a new tab.</i></center> <HR size="10" color="purple" width="60%"> <P></P> Following the phenomenal success of <b>IT</B>, Clara was the top female star in Hollywood for four years running (1927-1930). This time period included four of her sound films which negates the false impression that she stopped making movies because a thick Brooklyn accent got in the way of her transition to sound. She was actually afraid of the microphone and, because of her ability to make money for the studio, Paramount Pictures pushed her into talking films without training. <P></P> <center><iframe width="420" height="315" src="https://www.youtube.com/embed/5VSa1KIRhA0?rel=0" frameborder="0" allowfullscreen></iframe><br><i>Clara sings <b>I'm True To The Navy Now</b> in <b>Paramount on Parade</b> from 1930.<br>The song was not in Clara's movie of the same name.</i></center> <P></P> The following films can be viewed on <a href="https://archive.org/search.php?query=clara%20bow" target="_blank">archive.org</a>. I'm guessing the uploader - not me for once - changed the titles to fool the copyright police. All are sound films except for <b>Wings</b>. <OL><LI><a href="https://archive.org/details/PoorBoyRichGirl1930ClaraBowStanelySmithMitziGreenStuartErwinSkeetsGallagher" target="_blank"><b>Love Among The Millionaires</b></a> from 1930 is listed as <b>Poor Boy Rich Girl</b> (although the embedded screen title is <b>Rich Boy, Poor Girl</b>). It's a <i>musical romance</i> in which Clara sings! (<i>That's Worthwhile Waiting For</i>, <i>Believe It Or Not, I've Found My Man</i>, <i>Love Among the Millionaires</i>, <i>Rarin' To Go</i>)</LI><LI><a href="https://archive.org/details/PoorBoyRichGirl1930ClaraBowStanelySmithMitziGreenStuartErwinSkeetsGallagher" target="_blank"><b>The Saturday Night Kid</b></a> from 1929 is listed as <b>Love 'Em And Leave 'Em</b>. Clara co-stars with the husky-voiced <a href="http://amanandamouse.blogspot.com/2011/03/jean-arthur-is-more-than-secretary.html" target="_blank">Jean Arthur</a> very early in her career!!</LI><LI><a href="https://archive.org/details/TheGirlfriendOfTheNavy1930ClaraBow" target="_blank"><b>True To The Navy</b></a> from 1930 is listed as <b>The Girlfriend Of The Navy</b>. Clara's future husband Rex Bell appears as well as Frederic March and uncredited turns from Frances Dee and <a href="http://3linesabout.blogspot.com/2013/03/the-charms-of-louise-beavers.html" target="_blank">Louise Beavers</a>!!</LI><LI><a href="https://archive.org/details/StellasMerits1929ClaraBowFredricMarchMarcelineDayJackOakie" target="_blank"><b>The Wild Party</b></a> from 1930 is listed as <b>Stella's Merits</b>. Clara stars with Frederic March (again) and is directed by Dorothy Arzner!!</LI><LI><a href="https://archive.org/details/Hoop-La" target="_blank"><b>Hoop-La</b></a> from 1933 is listed as (surprise) <b>Hoop-La</b> and is Clara's last movie role. She was 28 when she left Hollywood and made almost as many sound features as she made silent ones.</LI><LI><a href="https://archive.org/details/TheShootingStar1929ClaraBowCharlesRogersRichardArlenJobyna" target="_blank"><b>Wings (a 111 minute version)</b></a> from 1927 is listed as <b>The Shooting Star</b>. The silent film is available on DVD at it's original length of almost two and a half hours and is the first winner of the Academy Award for Best Picture.</LI></OL> <center><blockquote><a data-pin-do="embedPin" href="https://www.pinterest.com/pin/548876273312225082/"></a><br><i><b>Parisian Love</b> can be viewed <a href="http://vdownload.eu/watch/7670544-quot-%D0%BF%D0%B0%D1%80%D0%B8%D0%B6%D1%81%D0%BA%D0%B0%D1%8F-%D0%BB%D1%8E%D0%B1%D0%BE%D0%B2%D1%8C-quot-1925-clara-bow.html" target="_blank">here.</a></i></blockquote></center> <P></P> Other reasons that contributed to Clara's departure from Hollywood were the lifelong mental health issues from which she suffered, enduring many stays in the sanitarium and shock treatments. She also went through a media circus when she charged her secretary Daisy DeVoe with financial mismanagement; DeVoe spouted many personal and damaging details about Clara while on the stand and the scandal sheets ate it up. <P></P> <center><iframe width="400" height="300" src="https://www.youtube.com/embed/kYUbBrGesV8?rel=0" frameborder="0" allowfullscreen></iframe><br><i>Rare film footage of Clara Bow in color</i></center> <P></P> One (of many) falsehood(s) that followed Bow throughout her life (and was published in the gossip tome <b>Hollywood Babylon</b> by Kenneth Anger) was that she bedded the entire University Of Southern California football team. Her on-screen wrestling match with a very well-endowed, male Great Dane dog in the 1933 talkie <b>Call Her Savage</b> probably did not help her in the eyes of the increasingly puritanical American public. She left Hollywood around the same time the Production Code was put into place and lived quietly with Bell (who also left Hollywood for a career in politics). They had two children and Bow died in 1965 from a heart attack. <P></P> <center><iframe width="400" height="300" src="https://www.youtube.com/embed/Y6YVuFDX-Oc?rel=0" frameborder="0" allowfullscreen></iframe><br><i><b>Clara Bow: Discovering the IT Girl</b>, TCM documentary</i></center> <P></P> <center><iframe width="400" height="300" src="https://www.youtube.com/embed/wO3YFNmmGc8?rel=0" frameborder="0" allowfullscreen></iframe><br><i><b>Get Your Man</b> a 1927 silent film, literally as this version has no musical soundtrack</i></center> <P></P> This interview was published in a 1929 book by Lee Shippey called Personal Glimpses of Famous Folks and Other Selections from the Lee Side o' L.A. <P></P> <center><iframe src='https://archive.org/stream/personalglimpses00ship?ui=embed#page/18/mode/2up' width='480px' height='430px' frameborder='0' ></iframe><br><i></i></center> <P></P> <center><a data-pin-do="embedPin" href="https://www.pinterest.com/pin/548876273312329203/"></a></center> <P></P> <center><iframe src='https://archive.org/stream/PhotoplayFebruary1928/Photoplay (1928-02)?ui=embed#page/n29/mode/2up' width='480px' height='430px' frameborder='0' ></iframe><br><i>I found this PDF on <a href="http://www.doctormacro.com/Movie%20Star%20Pages/Bow,%20Clara.htm" target="_blank">Dr. Macro's wonderful movie scan site</a><br>and uploaded it to archive.org for safe keeping.</i></center> <P></P> <center><a data-pin-do="embedPin" href="https://www.pinterest.com/pin/548876273306221844/"></a></center> <P></P> <center><a data-pin-do="embedBoard" href="https://www.pinterest.com/amanandamouse/clara-bow/"data-pin-scale-width="80" data-pin-scale-height="200" data-pin-board-width="400">Follow my board Clara Bow on Pinterest.</a><!-- Please call pinit.js only once per page --><script type="text/javascript" async src="//assets.pinterest.com/js/pinit.js"></script></center> <P></P> <center><a data-pin-do="embedPin" href="https://www.pinterest.com/pin/548876273312329203/"></a></center> <HR>A Man and A Mousehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/14293145068448926466noreply@blogger.com2tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-1193350251627318318.post-53548005851833689322015-02-20T21:05:00.000-05:002015-03-08T14:30:13.881-04:00Sugar-free Vegan Oatmeal Chocolate Chip CookiesThese (processed) sugar free vegan oatmeal chocolate chip cookies are delicious and very simple to make. Yes there are 14 steps in the recipe but I'm a technical writer so I have to make sure the process is completely and explicitly explained. A normal chef would write this recipe in five steps. (Rolled oats are gluten free unless processed in a facility which also processes glutenous grains like wheat so be sure to check the packaging on your oats if you want to be sure this cookie is gluten free.) <P></P> <center><a data-pin-do="embedPin" href="https://www.pinterest.com/pin/548876273311493073/"></a></center> <P></P> <b>INGREDIENTS</b><UL><LI>1 cup dates, packed</LI><LI>1 mushed up banana</LI><LI>2 Tbsp all natural almond butter or peanut butter</LI><LI>3/4 cup nut meal (ground from raw nuts: almonds, pecans, etc.)</LI><LI>3/4 cup rolled oats</LI><LI>Add-ins: dried fruit, dairy-free chocolate chips, flaxseed, seeds, coconut, nut pieces</LI></UL> <P></P> <b>INSTRUCTIONS</b><OL><LI>Soak the dates for about an hour in a bowl of warm water.</LI><LI>Drain the dates.</LI><LI>Chop the dates, drop them in a bowl and mush them up.<br>When finished, they should almost (but not quite) be the consistency of a mushed up banana.</LI><LI>Speaking of a mushed up banana, add it and the almond butter to the dates and mix until combined.</LI><LI>Add the nut meal and rolled oats.<br>I grind the nuts in a dedicated coffee bean grinder I use for nuts, flax seeds and the like.</LI><LI>Mix the mush until a loose dough is formed.<br>It should be wet and sticky. If it feels too wet to form into cookies, add more almond meal and/or oats.</LI><LI>Add 1/4 cup of your chosen add-in: dairy-free dark chocolate chips, raisins or nuts.<br>I've also added a handful of blueberries or a chopped up pear and neither made the dough any less sticky.</LI><LI>Chill the dough for 10 minutes while preheating the oven to 375 degrees F.</LI><LI>At 10 minutes, mix the dough and chill it for another 10 minutes.</LI><LI>Line a baking sheet with parchment paper.</LI><LI>Scoop out 1 Tbsp amounts of the cookie dough and form into loose discs on the baking sheet.<br>They won’t expand so you can pack them close together (but not touching).</LI><LI>Bake for 20-35 minutes or until golden brown and somewhat firm to the touch.<br>The amount of time is dependent on how thick your cookie scoops are. The thicker they are, the more time in the oven.</LI><LI>Remove and let set for a few minutes on the pan, then carefully transfer to a plate or cooling rack to cool. Serve immediately.</LI><LI>Store leftovers in an airtight container for several days, or move to the fridge or freezer for longer term storage.</LI></OL> <HR>A Man and A Mousehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/14293145068448926466noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-1193350251627318318.post-55769468827613753672015-02-01T12:49:00.000-05:002015-03-07T12:02:22.448-05:00Hazel: The Maid With The MostMiss Hazel Burke is a single white female who lives with, and works for, George and Dorothy Baxter and their young son, Harold. As chief cook and bottle washer she makes between $75 and $100 per week (including raises) and lives rent-free in a small room off the kitchen of the Baxter residence at 123 Marshall Road in Hydsberg, New York. She is a gregarious busybody with a penchant for telling old jokes and socializing with the other maids in the neighborhood in a collective known as The Sunshine Girls. Hazel's Social Security number is 111-07-7619 which tells us her card was issued somewhere between 1936 and 1950. <P></P> <center><a data-pin-do="embedPin" href="http://www.pinterest.com/pin/548876273311189714/"></a></center> <P></P> Despite having a Social Security number*, Hazel is not a real person but a cartoon from Ted Key, who created the single panel series in 1943 from a dream he had. The print <i>Hazel</i>, published in <b>The Saturday Evening Post</b>, was a huge success and Key was approached to adapt the cartoon for television. The television <b>Hazel</b> debuted in the fall of 1961 and was also a huge hit, ending its first year as the fourth most popular television program in the United States. Its run ended in 1966 after 154 episodes aired on two different networks. Since watching the luminous Shirley Booth in <a href="http://3linesabout.blogspot.com/2014/11/miss-shirley-booth.html" target="_blank">the decidedly charming and criminally underrated film <b>About Mrs. Leslie</b></a>, and remembering her heartbreaking, Tony and Oscar-winning performance in <b>Come Back Little Sheba</b>, I decided to revisit the actress's most famous role in a binge of the series - available on <a href="https://www.shoutfactory.com/tv/comedy/hazel-season-two" target="_blank">Shout Factory DVDs</a>. <P></P> <center><a data-pin-do="embedPin" href="https://www.pinterest.com/pin/548876273311206556/"></a></center> <P></P> <b>Hazel</b> is a well-written, nicely-paced, emotionally satisfying piece of television history. The characters are appealing, intelligent and funny and the situations are somewhat atypical for a series from the early 1960s. Some of the themes the series addresses include civic pride, immigration, diet/health, women's rights, divorce, commercialism, class, politics, and racial equality. Although the story templates can be somewhat derivative, each episode ties itself up nicely with some of the story lines even crossing over. <P></P> <center><iframe width="420" height="315" src="https://www.youtube.com/embed/Fb2w41Q7Tl8" frameborder="0" allowfullscreen></iframe><br><i><b>Hazel</b> theme with lyrics by Sammy Cahn, music by James Van Heusen, sung by the Modernaires<br>only used in the closing credits of the first two episodes of season one</i></center> <P></P> The first four seasons (which ran Thursday nights on NBC at 9:30 PM) follow the proud <i>Miss</i> as she corrects those who deem to call her <i>Mrs.</i>, cooks exemplary food, cleans the house (next door to Samantha and Darren Stephens of <b>Bewitched</b>), runs to answer the telephone, causes (and resolves) havoc for <i>Mr. B</i> (her loving but exasperated employer), helps <i>Missy</i> raise the tow-headed <i>Sport</i> (as she helped Missy's mother before her), bowls an almost perfect game, pals around with her compatriot in cleanliness Rosie, sings with the Sunshine Girls Quartet, increases her vocabulary, helps the dotty Johnson neighbors, infuriates Deirdre (Mr. B’s uppity sister), feeds the blustery Mr. Griffin, dates some eligible gentlemen, rejects a few marriage proposals, turns down successful business ventures to stay with the Baxters, and generally runs the city in which <i>everyone just calls me Hazel</i>. <P></P> <center><a data-pin-do="embedPin" href="https://www.pinterest.com/pin/548876273311212142/"></a></center> <P></P> Although William D. Russell directed every episode of seasons 1 to 4, several more in season 5 and deserves infinite kudos for keeping a consistent tone, it is Shirley Booth who is the heart and soul of the show. Ms. Booth can make you laugh, cry and jump for joy with one line of dialog. Her Hazel is proud and charitable, defiant and warm, nosy and helpful; one can't help but become involved in the shenanigans she causes for family, friends and town folk. Shirley summed up her feelings about <b>Hazel</b> in <b>The Saturday Evening Post</b>. Judging from her words <b>Hazel</b> predates <b>Seinfeld</b> as a show about <i>nothing</i> by thirty years. <blockquote><i>Good situation comedy makes the audience feel that the things that happen in their daily lives are important. By dramatizing these things -- actions as commonplace, perhaps, as cleaning out a closet or washing the dishes -- a show can make their lives more interesting.</i></blockquote> <center><a data-pin-do="embedPin" href="http://www.pinterest.com/pin/548876273311189726/"></a></center> <P></P> <b>Hazel</b> also subtly addressed women's rights. Dorothy Baxter is a mother with her own interior decorating business; this allows her to be home and to work. She was often found working in her studio or hosting guest star clients. Over its five seasons, <b>Hazel</b> had numerous guest stars who went on to, or were plucked from, established acting careers. Many of the following played recurring characters. <UL><LI>Diane Ladd (original Flo in <b>Alice Doesn't Live Here Anymore</b>) plays one of Mr. B’s many cousins, Sharlene.</LI><LI>Harold Gould (<b>Rhoda</b>, <b>The Golden Girls</b>) appears in several seasons</LI><LI>Robby the Robot (<b>Forbidden Planet</b>) appears as a maid in Hazel’s nightmare.</LI><LI><a href="http://amanandamouse.blogspot.com/2011/12/memories-of-harry-morgan.html" target="_blank">Maidie Norman</a> (<b>The Well</b>, <b>What Ever Happened to Baby Jane</b>, <b>Airport ’77</b>) is approached by Hazel to sign a petition to keep industry from razing a city park - if she is registered to vote. Ms. Norman, an African American woman, is registered. (I also spotted an African-American mailman and county employee in episodes of season 5.) <P></P> <center><a data-pin-do="embedPin" href="https://www.pinterest.com/pin/548876273311283369/"></a></center> <P></P></LI><LI>Harvey Korman (<b>The Carol Burnett Show</b>, <b>Blazing Saddles</b>)</LI><LI>James Stacy (<a href="https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ir4NjuKpKv0" target="_blank"><b>Cagney and Lacey</b></a>)</LI><LI>Philip Ober (Vivian Vance's husband, <b>I Love Lucy</b>)</LI><LI>Doris Singleton (Carolyn Appleby in <b>I Love Lucy</b>)</LI><LI>Lurene Tuttle (<b>Julia</b>, vaudeville, radio)</LI><LI>Ellen Corby (<b>The Waltons</b>)</LI><LI>Jamie Farr (<b>MASH</b>)</LI><LI>Alan Hale, Jr. (<b>Gilligan's Island</b>)</LI><LI>Barbara Shelley (<b>Village Of The Damned</b>)</LI><LI>Mabel Albertson (Jack Albertson's sister, <b>What's Up Doc</b>)</LI><LI>William Schallert (<b>The Patty Duke Show</b>)</LI><LI>Ken Berry (<b>Mayberry RFD, Mama's Family</b>)</LI><LI>Dabney Coleman (<b>9 to 5</b>, <b>Buffalo Bill</b>)</LI><LI>Leif Erickson (<a href="https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=K16t42Oos0s" target="_blank">westerns</a> among other gigs)</LI><LI>Frank Gifford (football) plays himself looking to buy a bowling alley</LI><LI>Claude Akins (<b>Movin’ On</b>, <b>BJ and the Bear</b>)</LI><LI>Lee Meriweather (Miss America, <b>Batman</b>)</LI><LI>Jack Dodson (<b>The Andy Griffith Show</b>, <b>Mayberry R.F.D.</b>)</LI><LI>Bonnie Franklin has an uncredited walk-on in season five. Ironically ten years later she would star in <b>One Day At A Time</b>, the CBS situation comedy created and written by Whitney Blake. Blake herself was nixed for the part as being too old, much to her consternation.</LI><LI>Don Kirshner (<b>Rock Concert</b>) is credited as a music consultant</LI></UL> <center><iframe width="400" height="300" src="https://www.youtube.com/embed/Q_w62E0Cpak?rel=0" frameborder="0" allowfullscreen></iframe><br><i>This pilot episode features Edward Andrews as Mr. B<br>the part played in the series by Don DeFore</i></center> <P></P> The regular members of the cast are also uniformly excellent (especially Don DeFore and Cathy Lewis holding their own against the powerhouse Booth) and deserve mention. <UL><LI>George <i>Mr. B</i> Baxter (1961-1965) ... Don DeFore (wonderfully plays an endearing foil to Hazel)</LI><LI>Dorothy <i>Missy</i> Baxter (1961-1965) ... Whitney Blake (a stunningly beautiful woman whose graciousness and love for Hazel shines)</LI><LI>Harold <i>Sport</i> Baxter ... Bobby Buntrock (a charming child actor who <a href="http://www.findagrave.com/cgi-bin/fg.cgi?page=gr&GRid=7369996" target="_blank">died in a car accident at the age of 22, eight years after the series end</a>)</LI><LI>Rosie ... Maudie Prickett (Prickett plays kind-of prickly)</LI><LI>Harvey Griffin ... Howard Smith (one of Mr. B's many clients and Hazel's many suitors)</LI><LI>Deirdre Thompson (1961-1965) ... Cathy Lewis (played to the hilt by the underrated Lewis, Mr. B's snooty sister can never quite one up Hazel - not for lack of trying)</LI><LI>Harriet Johnson (1961-1965) ... Norma Varden (wonderfully dotty)</LI><LI>Herbert Johnson (1961-1965) ... Donald Foster (wonderfully dotty too)</LI><LI>Harry Thompson (1961-1965) ... Robert P. Lieb</LI><LI>Steve Baxter (1965-1966) ... Ray Fulmer </LI><LI>Barbara Baxter (1965-1966) ... Lynn Borden</LI><LI>Susie Baxter (1965-1966) ... Julia Benjamin</LI><LI>Millie Ballard (1965-1966) ... Ann Jillian (<b>It's A Living</b>, <b>Mae West</b>)</LI><LI>Mona Williams (1965-1966) ... Mala Powers </LI><LI>Fred Williams (1965-1966) ... Charles Bateman</LI><LI>Jeff Williams (1965-1966) ... Pat Cardi</LI><LI>Smiley the dog (Harold's pet)</LI><li>Black cat (Susie's pet)</LI></UL> <blockquote>Special kudos to <a href="http://www.imdb.com/name/nm0751514/" target="_blank">William D. Russell</a> who directed 136 of 154 episodes: all of seasons 1 through 4 and 11 of 29 in season 5.</blockquote> <P></P> <center><a data-pin-do="embedPin" href="https://www.pinterest.com/pin/548876273311201714/"></a></center> <P></P> The ratings dropped from #4 in season one to Top 30 in season four when NBC cancelled it. Shirley Booth purchased the rights and worked out a deal with CBS for another season. Season five was to follow <b>The Andy Griffith Show</b> on Monday nights at 9:30 PM. After looking at the payroll, Booth and the other producers decided not to renew the contracts of DeFore and Blake. CBS was also looking for younger demographics so George and Dorothy were sent overseas and younger actors were hired for the roles of Steve and Barbara Baxter, George's brother and wife, who became Harold's caretakers. Bobby Buntrock didn't make a lot of money so dropping him wouldn't have balanced the budget and keeping him preserved continuity. <P></P> <center><a data-pin-do="embedPin" href="https://www.pinterest.com/pin/548876273311535311/"></a></center> <P></P> The context of the season five episodes stayed the same: Hazel works for a blustery (albeit younger) man of the house and his pretty blonde wife. The role of George and Steve Baxter's snooty sister Deirdre was even usurped by Barbara Baxter's friend Mona Williams who, with her husband Fred and son Jeff, lived next door and appeared in a number of episodes. (Thankfully, Cathy Lewis makes several season 5 appearances as well.) Most surprisingly, Hazel gets out of her uniform quite a bit to sell houses for the younger Baxter's real estate office - even dressing as a beatnik in <i>My Son, The Sheepdog</i>, the series' ode to rock and roll. Ultimately though, season five ratings were worse than season four and <b>Hazel</b> was cancelled for a second time. <P></P> <center><iframe width="400" height="225" src="https://www.youtube.com/embed/MEnc5tvjgfo?rel=0" frameborder="0" allowfullscreen></iframe><br><i>From baking cookies to driving the Baxters to paying a toll <b>Hazel</b><br>filmed a myriad of opening credits. Here is a mashup of five seasons worth.</i></center> <P></P> Most recently, the story of how Hazel found her way to the Baxters has been revamped as a musical with music by Ron Abel, lyrics by Chuck Steffan and book by Lissa Levin. (In the 1950s, Key adapted his cartoon into a play which Booth read; reportedly, she liked the character but didn't think the play held up for two hours.) <b>Hazel, A Musical Maid in America</b> was showcased for producers (with direction by situation comedy and theatre veteran Lucie Arnaz) in <a href="http://wizardworlddigital.com/hazel-a-musical-maid-in-america-gets-closer-to-broadway-with-readings-directed-by-lucie-arnaz-this-thursday-and-friday-in-new-york.html" target="_blank">October, 2014</a>. The latest news <a href="http://www.examiner.com/article/take-a-booth-and-sit-lucie-arnaz-to-direct-a-broadway-musical-based-on-hazel" target="_blank">brings it to Broadway sometime in 2015.</a> Only time will tell if the Maid With The Most can match the success of her print and television runs with a live action run on the boards. <P></P> <center><a data-pin-do="embedPin" href="https://www.pinterest.com/pin/548876273311217873/"></a></center> <P></P> <center><b>WORLD INTERNET PREMIERE</b></center> <HR size="10" color="purple" width="60%"> <center><blockquote><i>Season Four of the Hazel DVD set released by Shout Factory contains digital ephemera in the form of a Screen Gems promotional booklet for potential advertisers of the television series. It contains text about the show and the characters, some Ted Key illustrations and a preface by Peter Key, the cartoonist's son. I probably shouldn't have done this (since it's not technically public domain) but I've put this booklet to PDF. Email me for a download link.</i></blockquote></center> <HR size="10" color="purple" width="60%"> <P></P> <center><a data-pin-do="embedPin" href="https://www.pinterest.com/pin/548876273311206668/"></a></center> <P></P> <center><a data-pin-do="embedPin" href="https://www.pinterest.com/pin/548876273311178458/"></a></center> <P></P> <b>*Hazel's Social Security number is revealed when she takes a part time job in Masterson's Department Store (season 1, episode 12).</b> <P></P> <center><a data-pin-do="embedPin" href="https://www.pinterest.com/pin/548876273311229834/"></a></center> <P></P> <center><b>See <a href="https://www.pinterest.com/amanandamouse/hazel-burke-the-maid-with-the-most/" target="_blank">my Pinterest page for more pictures of Shirley Booth and the cast of Hazel.</a></b></center> <P></P> <center><a data-pin-do="embedPin" href="https://www.pinterest.com/pin/548876273311206650/"></a></center> <P></P> <center><a data-pin-do="embedPin" href="https://www.pinterest.com/pin/548876273311206569/"></a></center> <P></P> <center><a data-pin-do="embedBoard" href="https://www.pinterest.com/amanandamouse/hazel-the-maid-with-the-most/"data-pin-scale-width="80" data-pin-scale-height="200" data-pin-board-width="400">Follow Michael,'s board Hazel, the Maid with the Most on Pinterest.</a><!-- Please call pinit.js only once per page --><script type="text/javascript" async src="//assets.pinterest.com/js/pinit.js"></script></center> <P></P> <center><b>See <a href="https://www.pinterest.com/peggyjoshumate/hazel-youre-a-doozy/" target="_blank">Peggy J. Shumate's Pinterest page for even more pictures of Shirley Booth and Hazel.</a></b></center> <P></P> <HR>A Man and A Mousehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/14293145068448926466noreply@blogger.com3tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-1193350251627318318.post-87602886599605811892014-12-22T11:24:00.000-05:002014-12-22T17:35:58.707-05:00Download Free Music From Your LibraryDo you have a library card? <blockquote><p></p><b>li·brary kard</b> <i>noun</i> \ˈlī-ˌbrer-ē kard, -ˌbre-rē kard; <i>British usually & US sometimes</i> : identification that permits someone to temporarily take home literary, musical, artistic, or reference materials (as books, manuscripts, recordings, or films) that are kept in a building and are for use but not for sale</blockquote> I have a library card with the <a href="http://www.nypl.org/" target="_blank">New York Public Library</a> system. On my first perusal of the library system's web site one year ago this week, I found a link that lead me to <B>Free Music!</B> <P></P> <center><img src="http://www.amanandamouse.com/blogspot/freegalMusic.jpg" width="400" /></center><br /> <P></P><a href="http://www.freegalmusic.com/" target="_blank">Freegalmusic.com</a> allows anyone with a current library card to download three songs a week for free. These songs are 256 kbps, in the MP3 format and contain no DRM encoding. In my recent searches I have seen some music that is currently out-of-print but still downloadable from the library system - which must have some ragged old compact disc in a dusty branch somewhere. What a treat! <blockquote><b><i>Freegal also allows logged in users to stream three hours of music a day. FREE!</i></b></blockquote> To find out if you can download and stream using Freegal Music, you'll have to search the web site of your local library to see if they partner with Freegal. You can connect to the web site from the New York Public Library site using <a href="http://nypl.freegalmusic.com/index" target="_blank">this link</a> and check out the music selection ... but cannot log in (or download) without a valid library card. Recently I've downloaded: <P></P> <UL><LI>Carrie Underwood</LI><LI>Mark Ronson</LI><LI>Hozier</LI><LI>Michael Jackson</LI><LI>Bob Dylan</LI><LI>Kaye Ballard</LI><LI>Barbra Streisand</LI><LI>Foo Fighters</LI><LI>Beyonce</LI><LI>Elvis Presley</LI><LI>Pink Floyd</LI><LI>Miley Cyrus</LI><LI>Daft Punk</LI><LI>Pitbull</LI><LI>Miles Davis</LI><LI>Meghan Trainor</LI></UL> <center><iframe width="400" height="225" src="//www.youtube.com/embed/7PCkvCPvDXk?rel=0" frameborder="0" allowfullscreen></iframe></center> <P></P> There's also an app for it! <a href="https://itunes.apple.com/us/app/freegal-music/id508036345?mt=8" target="_blank">The Freegal App</a> allows you to search and browse the Freegal Music collection of your library, and to download, store and play your Freegal MP3 files on your smartphone. OverDrive is another service. It is a virtual check out/return catalog of digital books and music. Good for Kindle/eBook/audiobook users. Not sure how the <i>return</i> actually works but I have no doubt that it does. <P></P> <center><img src="http://www.amanandamouse.com/blogspot/freegalmusic.jpg" width="250" /></center> <P></P> This information was originally published when I saw this sign, splashed with a picture of Leona Lewis, that I found in the <a href="http://www.sjpl.org/rosegarden" target="_blank">Rose Garden branch of the San Jose Public Library</a> when I lived on the left coast. <P></P> <center><iframe width="420" height="315" src="http://www.youtube.com/embed/4W5dYw1eQuM" frameborder="0" allowfullscreen></iframe></center><P></P> <P></P><HR>A Man and A Mousehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/14293145068448926466noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-1193350251627318318.post-1706388098508188252014-12-21T08:57:00.000-05:002014-12-28T18:09:22.690-05:00How Colleen Moore Broke Into The Movies<center><img src="http://www.amanandamouse.com/blogspot/BrokeIntoMovies/ColleenMoore/colleenPic.jpg" width="250" /><br><i>Portrait from <b>How I Broke Into The Movies</b></i></center> <P></P> With the recent discovery, restoration, and availability on Warner Archive disc of <a href="http://3linesabout.blogspot.com/2014/11/why-be-good-1929.html" target=_blank"><b>Why Be Good?</b></a> and <b>Synthetic Sin</b>, I thought this an opportune time to post the second <i>world internet premiere</i> from the book <b>How I Broke Into The Movies</b>. <b>How I Broke Into The Movies</b> was published in 1930 and contains articles on the title theme written by movie stars of the day like Joan Crawford, Buster Keaton, Mary Pickford, Clara Bow, Al Jolson, Greta Garbo, and 53 other notable actors. The first article from the book was published in <a href="http://amanandamouse.blogspot.com/2014/10/how-marion-davies-broke-into-movies.html" target=_blank">my posting on Marion Davies</a>. This second article was written by the inimitable flapper with the black helmet who starred in the discovered films previously mentioned, and might possibly be the first time (although not the last time) that Colleen Moore took pen to paper as a published writer. <P></P> <center><a data-pin-do="embedPin" href="http://www.pinterest.com/pin/548876273310408003/"></a></center> <P></P> <center><b>This article continues after the WORLD INTERNET PREMIERE break.</b></center> <HR size="10" color="purple" width="60%"> <center><img src="http://www.amanandamouse.com/blogspot/BrokeIntoMovies/ColleenMoore/colleenText.jpg" width="350" /><br><i><b>How I Broke Into The Movies</b> by Colleen Moore<br>Right click to open the image in a new tab.</i></center> <HR size="10" color="purple" width="60%"> <P></P> <a href="http://3linesabout.blogspot.com/2014/11/why-be-good-1929.html" target=_blank"><b>Why Be Good?</b></a> and <b>Synthetic Sin</b> are the last silent films Colleen made - although technically they are sound synchronized. In the time following Al Jolson's history-making <i>You ain't heard nothin' yet</i>, studios were transitioning to sound by releasing silent films with timed music and sound effects recorded to shellac discs. The disc was started when the movie began and thus movie and sound were synchronized. <a href="http://3linesabout.blogspot.com/2014/11/why-be-good-1929.html" target=_blank"><b>Why Be Good?</b></a> and <b>Synthetic Sin</b> were both discovered in an Italian archive almost ten years ago; fortunately, the Vitaphone discs for <a href="http://3linesabout.blogspot.com/2014/11/why-be-good-1929.html" target=_blank"><b>Why Be Good?</b></a> were complete and available but only the final disc of <b>Synthetic Sin</b> was found. For the theatrical showings and on disc, <a href="http://3linesabout.blogspot.com/2014/11/why-be-good-1929.html" target=_blank"><b>Why Be Good?</b></a> is sound synchronized while <b>Synthetic Sin</b> has a piano score until the last reel when the disc is used.<b>*</b> <P></P> <center><iframe src='https://archive.org/stream/PantomimeJan.211922/Pantomime012122?ui=embed#page/n19/mode/2up' width='480px' height='430px' frameborder='0' ></iframe><br><i>These pictures of domestic goddess Moore were published<br>in the January 1922 issue of Pantomime magazine.</i></center> <P></P> <center><a data-pin-do="embedPin" href="http://www.pinterest.com/pin/548876273310431880/"></a></center> <P></P> <br> Colleen's career started in 1917 with an appearance in <b>The Bad Boy</b>. She, like many other actresses of the time, wore her hair in long curls to emulate the most successful and highest paid actress of the time, Mary Pickford. It wasn't until 1923 when Colleen was begging First National Studio for the starring role in their film of the best-selling novel <b>Flaming Youth</b> that her mother offered this sage advice: <i>Why don't we cut your hair and then make [the studio] give you a test for the part?</i> Out came the scissors, Colleen got the part and <b>Flaming Youth</b> became her biggest film hit to date. The film made Colleen Moore a huge star (and for a time the highest paid actress in Hollywood). Girls everywhere cut their hair into a Dutch bob and copied her style of dress. Before Clara Bow, Louise Brooks and Joan Crawford, Colleen was the quintessential flapper. <P></P> <center><iframe width="400" height="225" src="//www.youtube.com/embed/88PMhS1oYjs?rel=0" frameborder="0" allowfullscreen></iframe><br><i>This clip is all that remains of <b>Flaming Youth</b> the<br>film that put Colleen Moore, and flapperdom, on the map.</i></center> <P></P> <center><a data-pin-do="embedPin" href="http://www.pinterest.com/pin/548876273310465048/"></a></center> <P></P> Several other films with Colleen are available online including the WORLD INTERNET PREMIERE of the (public domain) silent film <b>Ella Cinders</b> which I've (personally) scored using (public domain) jazz tunes from the 1920s courtesy of <a href="https://archive.org/" target="_blank">archive.org</a>. <b>Ella Cinders</b> was a huge hit for Colleen in 1926. Based on <a href="http://digitalcomicmuseum.com/index.php?dlid=10481" target="_blank">the popular comic strip of the time</a> (and the tale of Cinderella), <b>Ella Cinders</b> enters her hometown beauty contest to win a chance to make movies in Hollywood. Of course, there's a mean stepmother and two ugly stepsisters as well as a ball and a handsome <i>prince</i>, and Colleen excels as the put-upon Ella. At this point, her skill as an actress had been honed for almost ten years and her comic mug as she learns to act from a book (similar to the scene of Marion Davies' acting mug in <b>Show People</b>) is classic. Colleen is poignant, pretty and priceless. <P></P> <center><b>WORLD INTERNET PREMIERE</b></center> <HR size="10" color="purple" width="60%"> <center><iframe src="https://archive.org/embed/michael_amanandamouse_EC" width="400" height="300" frameborder="0" webkitallowfullscreen="true" mozallowfullscreen="true" allowfullscreen></iframe><br><i>I've uploaded Colleen Moore's <b>Ella Cinders</b> with a custom score<br>using jazz tunes from the 1920s to both <a href="https://archive.org/details/michael_amanandamouse_EC" target="_blank">archive.org</a> and <a href="http://youtu.be/2WlowTI6Arc" target="_blank">YouTube</a>.<br>A list of the songs and artists is below.*</i></center> <HR size="10" color="purple" width="60%"> <P></P> <center><a data-pin-do="embedPin" href="http://www.pinterest.com/pin/548876273310408019/"></a></center> <P></P> <b>The Scarlet Letter</b> is Colleen's last film, a 1934 talking version of the Nathaniel Hawthorne novel. It's a mashup of a movie, starting with humor and then veering down the dramatic path with the classic story of adultery. Colleen is fine in her performance but the movie is a little too mundane to be engrossing, coming down to a curio best viewed by fans of Colleen Moore. <P></P> <center><iframe width="420" height="315" src="//www.youtube.com/embed/WzaZjchoJoY?rel=0" frameborder="0" allowfullscreen></iframe></center> <P></P> <center><a data-pin-do="embedPin" href="http://www.pinterest.com/pin/548876273310543559/"></a></center> <P></P> <b>The Power And The Glory</b> was the first screenplay written by Preston Sturges to be made into a movie, and won the 1933 Academy Award for Best Original Screenplay. The film is often cited as a precursor in narrative style and theme to <b>Citizen Kane</b>. Colleen herself has called it out as her best and she is wonderful in an understated performance (aging from her 20s to her 60s) playing off her equally skilled co-star Spencer Tracey. The version available on YouTube looks to be from television with hard-coded Spanish subtitles (the credits are not original) and can be seen in six parts. <P></P> <center><iframe width="400" height="300" src="//www.youtube.com/embed/tyPERLdKV7g?rel=0" frameborder="0" allowfullscreen></iframe></center> <P></P> <center><a data-pin-do="embedPin" href="http://www.pinterest.com/pin/548876273310486771/"></a></center> <P></P> Colleen Moore was a smart woman and realized the historical significance of the motion picture business and her involvement in it. In 1944, she donated fifteen of her movies to the Museum of Modern Art where she felt they would be stored and protected. Unfortunately, MOMA did no such thing and the films were left to rot when they were finally discovered again in the 1970s. Thus, many of Colleen's films, if available, are incomplete and in poor condition. This is why the discovery and restoration of <a href="http://3linesabout.blogspot.com/2014/11/why-be-good-1929.html" target=_blank"><b>Why Be Good?</b></a> and <b>Synthetic Sin</b> has been celebrated. <P></P> <center><a data-pin-do="embedPin" href="http://www.pinterest.com/pin/548876273310400653/"></a></center> <P></P> Colleen left acting after <b>The Scarlet Letter</b> and turned her talents to a hobby that she had since childhood: dollhouses. Her love for dollhouses started when she was four years of age and her father made her one out of cigar boxes. Over time, he made three more and Colleen began collecting miniatures for the houses. Kathleen's Collection (as it was called) continued into adulthood and bade her father to ask one day in 1928 <i>Why don't we build a fairy castle to house your collection?</i> The set designers and construction people of First National Studio became the <i>architects</i> of what was referred to as <i>Colleen's Folly</i>. The interior has running water and electricity, solid gold chandeliers (studded with diamonds and emeralds), scores copied in tiny notes by composers such as Rachmaninoff, Stravinsky, Irving Berlin and George Gershwin and leather-bound miniature books written in small-scale handwriting by Noel Coward, Sinclair Lewis, Thornton Wilder, Arthur Conan Doyle, Edna Ferber and John Steinbeck (among others). You will also see glass slippers small enough to fit a 5-inch tall Cinderella, a pistol so small enough to fire tiny silver bullets, a floating spiral staircase, unsupported and a carved ivory floor. Now referred to as <b>Colleen Moore's Fairy Castle</b>, it has a scale of one inch to one foot and has been on display at the <a href="http://www.msichicago.org/whats-here/exhibits/fairycastle/the-exhibit/great-hall/" target="_blank">Museum of Science and Technology in Chicago</a> since 1949. <P></P> <center><a data-pin-do="embedPin" href="http://www.pinterest.com/pin/548876273310245751/"></a></center> <P></P> In 1968, Colleen published her autobiography called <b>Silent Star</b>. Although it certainly dealt with her films and marriages (three to the point at which it was published), she also recounts many stories of other actors that she lived through first hand or heard from others. She recounts among other infamous tales, the Fatty Arbuckle trials, the William Desmond Taylor murder, Wallace Reid's drug addiction and death, Mack Sennett and Mabel Normand, D.W. Griffith's fall from Hollywood grace, and the marriage of Jean Harlow and Paul Bern. It's a fascinating and charming look at the early days of Hollywood and the writing reflects Colleen's effervescence. <P></P> <center><a data-pin-do="embedPin" href="http://www.pinterest.com/pin/548876273310488080/"></a></center> <P></P> <center><a data-pin-do="embedPin" href="http://www.pinterest.com/pin/548876273310431937/"></a></center> <P></P> Having spent her post-Hollywood years earning a living in real estate and finance, the publisher of <b>Silent Star</b> asked her to pen a second book and in 1969, she published <b>How Women Can Make Money in the Stock Market</b>. In 1986 a third book was published in which Colleen played a major role. In 1967 King Vidor (a lifelong friend who also directed Colleen in <b>The Sky Pilot</b> in 1921) started researching the unsolved murder of William Desmond Taylor for a movie that financial whiz Colleen would produce. The film never came to fruition but Vidor's boxes of research were found after his death and became the nucleus for the best-selling book <b>A Cast Of Killers</b> by Sidney D. Kirkpatrick. <P></P> <center><a data-pin-do="embedPin" href="http://www.pinterest.com/pin/548876273310541200/"></a></center> <P></P> <center><a data-pin-do="embedPin" href="http://www.pinterest.com/pin/548876273310551134/"></a></center> <P></P> Colleen had no children of her own but was mother to the children of Homer Hargrave, her third husband who died in 1965; they had been married since 1936. In 1982, she married for a fourth time. She died six years later of stomach cancer, leaving behind a legacy of laughter, wonder and imagination. <P></P> <center><iframe src='https://archive.org/stream/personalglimpses00ship?ui=embed#page/n5/mode/2up' width='480px' height='430px' frameborder='0' ></iframe><br><i>This interview was published in a 1929 book by Lee Shippey called<br><b>Personal Glimpses of Famous Folks and Other Selections from the Lee Side o' L.A.</b>.</i></center> <P></P> <center><a data-pin-do="embedPin" href="http://www.pinterest.com/pin/548876273310401102/"></a></center> <P></P> <center><a data-pin-do="embedPin" href="http://www.pinterest.com/pin/548876273310407231/"></a></center> <P></P> <center><iframe src='https://archive.org/stream/PantomimeMarch251922/Pantomime032522?ui=embed#page/n5/mode/2up' width='480px' height='430px' frameborder='0' ></iframe><br>This interview was published in the March 1922 issue<br>of Pantomime magazine, an early Hollywood fan magazine.</center> <P></P> <center><a data-pin-do="embedPin" href="http://www.pinterest.com/pin/548876273310407216/"></a></center> <P></P> <center><a data-pin-do="embedPin" href="http://www.pinterest.com/pin/548876273310407242/"></a></center> <P></P> <center><b>See <a href="http://www.pinterest.com/amanandamouse/colleen-moore/" target="_blank">my Pinterest page for a slew of<br>pictures of Colleen from throughout her life and career.</a></b></center> <P></P> <center><a data-pin-do="embedPin" href="http://www.pinterest.com/pin/548876273310485909/"></a></center> <P></P> <center><a data-pin-do="embedPin" href="http://www.pinterest.com/pin/548876273310407899/"></a></center> <P></P> <center><b>*</b>For more information on sound synchronized films, see the <a href="http://vitaphoneproject.com/" target="_blank">Vitaphone Project</a>. Other Colleen Moore web sites include <a href="http://www.things-and-other-stuff.com/movies/profiles/colleen-moore.html" target="_blank">The Silent Collection featuring Colleen Moore</a> and <a href="https://sites.google.com/site/colleenmooresite/" target="_blank">The Colleen Moore Project</a>.</center> <P></P> <center><a data-pin-do="embedPin" href="http://www.pinterest.com/pin/548876273310487621/"></a></center> <P></P> *Listing of songs used in <b>Ella Cinders</b>: <UL><LI><a href="https://archive.org/search.php?query=isham%20jones%20AND%20mediatype%3Aaudio" target="_blank">Henpecked Blues - Isham Jones & His Orchestra</a></LI><LI><a href="https://archive.org/details/Free_20s_Jazz_Collection" target="_blank">Hold Me - artist unknown</a></LI><LI><a href="https://archive.org/details/Free_20s_Jazz_Collection" target="_blank">Hot Mama - artist unknown</a></LI><LI><a href="https://archive.org/details/Free_20s_Jazz_Collection" target="_blank">Whispering - (Paul?) Whiteman</a></LI><LI><a href="https://archive.org/details/Free_20s_Jazz_Collection" target="_blank">Blue Rose - Free 20s Jazz Collection</a></LI><LI><a href="https://archive.org/details/Free_20s_Jazz_Collection" target="_blank">Bugle Call Blues - artist unknown</a></LI><LI><a href="https://archive.org/details/Free_20s_Jazz_Collection" target="_blank">Sing You Sinners - artist unknown</a></LI><LI><a href="https://archive.org/search.php?query=isham%20jones%20AND%20mediatype%3Aaudio" target="_blank">Paddlin' Madelin Home - Isham Jones & His Orchestra</a></LI><LI><a href="https://archive.org/search.php?query=isham%20jones%20AND%20mediatype%3Aaudio" target="_blank">Wabash Blues - Isham Jones & His Orchestra</a></LI><LI><a href="https://archive.org/search.php?query=isham%20jones%20AND%20mediatype%3Aaudio" target="_blank">Alabama - Isham Jones & His Orchestra</a></LI><LI><a href="https://archive.org/search.php?query=isham%20jones%20AND%20mediatype%3Aaudio" target="_blank">Cry - Isham Jones & His Orchestra</a></LI><LI><a href="https://archive.org/search.php?query=isham%20jones%20AND%20mediatype%3Aaudio" target="_blank">Ivy - Isham Jones & His Orchestra</a></LI><LI><a href="https://archive.org/search.php?query=isham%20jones%20AND%20mediatype%3Aaudio" target="_blank">Never Again - Isham Jones & His Orchestra</a></LI><LI><a href="https://archive.org/details/Free_20s_Jazz_Collection" target="_blank">When Eyes Of Blue Are Fooling You - Howard Lanin</a></LI></UL> <HR>A Man and A Mousehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/14293145068448926466noreply@blogger.com0